Serena Perry inquest: Community treatment wasn't an option - Action News
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New Brunswick

Serena Perry inquest: Community treatment wasn't an option

New Brunswick and the territories are the only places in Canada that don't have community treatment legislation to ensure patients like Serena Perry take their medication, under supervision, while living in the community, a coroner's inquest heard on Wednesday.

N.B. does not have legislation to ensure patients like Perry take their medications in community

Perry Inquest Day IV

9 years ago
Duration 1:44
Continuing coverage of the inquest into the death in hospital of Serena Perry.

New Brunswick and the territories are the only places in Canada that don't have community treatment legislation to ensure patients like Serena Perry take their medication, under supervision, while living in the community, a coroner's inquest heard on Wednesday.

Perry, 22, an involuntarypsychiatric patient at the Saint John Regional Hospital, was found dead in the hospital's amphitheatre on Feb. 14, 2012, with a blue garment wrapped loosely around her neck.

Serena Perry, 22, was found dead in the Saint John Regional Hospital's amphitheatre on Feb. 14, 2012. (Courtesy of Castle Funeral Home)
The inquest is being held todetermine the facts surrounding Perry'sdeath. The jury may also make recommendations aimed at preventing similar deaths.

Mental health nurse clinician KarenKoventold the inquestPerry suffered from paranoid schizophrenia and would not take her medication when she was nothospitalized.

It was the third time Perryhad beenadmitted to the psychiatric unit, said Koven.

Although there had been discussions about putting herinto a group home, Perry refused and her family was also against the idea, Koven said.

Dr.VinodJoshi, a psychiatrist who had been treating Perry since 2009, said he tried to get her to understand she had to take her medications.

But she heard voices and suffered from religious delusions, he said. "God was talking to her. God had told her she didn't need to take any more medications."

About 40 per cent of patients with Perry's condition are non-compliant when it comes to taking their medication, said Joshi. As a result, they often relapse as soon as they're released, he said.

John Barry, who is representing the Horizon Health Network, says the hospital corporation would supporta community treatment program.

"You can see the advantage," he told reporters outside the courthouse.

"It's been advocated in New Brunswick by the chiefs of psychiatry in all New Brunswick hospitals. And Ifully anticipate it will be one of the recommendations that will come out of Horizon at the end of this inquest," he said.

Such a move would require amendments to the province's Mental Health Act.

The inquest continues on Thursday. Three weeks have been set aside.