Dunedin poet Ian Loughran died after clinicians failed to provide follow-up care, coroner finds
Ian Loughran's mental health care fell below standards in ways that contributed to his death, a coroner says.
Clinicians failed to give a Dunedin poet follow-up care and medication after he left a mental health ward, denying him his best chance of recovery before he died by suicide, a coroner has found.
Ian Loughran, who suffered from bipolar disorder, died in July 2021 following two hospital admissions earlier that year.
In findings released on Wednesday following an inquest, coroner Mary-Anne Borrowdale said Loughran's mental health care fell below standards in ways that contributed to his death.
"While it is not possible to say that Mr Loughran's death would have been prevented had these errors not occurred, the periods in which he was largely unmedicated and lost to care deprived him of the best chance of recovery from his mental illness," she said.
The coroner said Loughran worked as a compliance officer and was a busy and well-loved member of Dunedin's literary scene.
The 55-year-old was a performance poet, playwright and comedy writer who recorded music and radio shows.
Loughran was first sectioned and taken to a secure ward at Wakari Hospital for five days in February 2021 after his wife became worried about his paranoid behaviour.
He was admitted again a month later after his mental state "rapidly deteriorated" and his wife reported angry, intense and paranoid behaviour and reckless spending.
Coroner Borrowdale said Loughran was treated with an injection of depot olanzapine and responded well during his first stay but was discharged without a plan for his next injection of a mood-stabilising medication that was indispensable to his wellbeing because of missing paperwork.
An official discharge summary prepared at the time also failed to provide clear advice to Loughran or his GP about his medication, warning signs of a relapse or how to access help in a crisis, the coroner said.
"I find that there was a lack of comprehensive and integrated follow-up that led to Mr Loughran not attending community mental health services and not receiving his essential medication, without which his rapid deterioration was virtually assured," she said.
The coroner said Loughran worked as a compliance officer and was a busy and well-loved member of Dunedin's literary scene. Photo: supplied
After his second stay in hospital, Loughran went 11 weeks without any specialist follow-up.
The coroner said he was supposed to have a dedicated worker looking after him but no-one was appointed.
"Clinical records misleadingly describe Mr Loughran as then going 'AWOL' and 'avoid[ing] being seen by our services' after his discharge," she said.
"It would be more accurate to st
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