âMy autistic son had no safety net in times of crisisâ

The family of a man who died after repeatedly banging his head against a wall in a mental health unit have said there was no âsafety netâ for people who needed their son.
Declan Morrison, 26, from Cambridge, was autistic, had severe learning disabilities and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.
Hours before his death, he was left naked in a room with CCTV cameras, but his family said the alarm was raised only when staff found him unresponsive.
His parents, Graeme and Sam Morrison, are now demanding answers about what went wrong with their sonâs care.
Mrs Morrison said: âHe was left to his own devices in an environment of no stimulation, bright lights and bare walls that he could not understand.â
In March 2022, Declan spent 10 days in a Section 136 mental health assessment suite, as there were no beds available in the whole of the UK.
But he could not cope with the harsh, clinical environment that required a maximum of 24 hours under the Mental Health Act.
The suite was described by coroner Simon Milburn as âCompletely unfairâ For Declanâs needs.

Mr Morrison believed the decision not to rely on CCTV and not interact with Declan âmay have made the situation worseâ.
The coroner said that staff at the facility were not properly trained to care for patients with learning disabilities.
Mrs Morrison said she discovered something was wrong with Declan on March 18, 2022 while he was in the ambulance.
âTo actually find out that your son now needs a brain operation to live â it was horrific,â he said.
Declan underwent emergency surgery but never recovered. He died on 2 April 2022.

From 2014 to 2021, Declan lived in Sundach House near Peterborough, run by Kisimul, a company owned by Luxembourg-based investment funds.
In 2019, after a review of Declanâs needs, it was concluded that the facility could no longer provide an appropriate level of care for his safety.
Yet in 2021 Declan was still living in the Sundach house.
Declanâs family said his behavior worsened after some of his carers went to work for an extra 50p an hour at a nearby Amazon warehouse.
âSomething as simple as 50p is making a difference, and itâs impacting our children,â Mrs Morrison said.

In May 2021, Declan was moved to Yewdale Farm in Willingham, Cambridgeshire, a residential care home run by CareTech Community Services.
A safeguarding report titled Something Has to Change, which was compiled by the Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Safeguarding Partnership after Declanâs death, noted that the agency staff caring for him were of a high standard.
Yet his father said Declan âspent most of his time alone because they (the staff) couldnât interact with him.â
Caretec said that when Declan is âresponsiveâ to staff engagement, they will support him directly. If he did not want to talk, the staff would sit in an adjacent room and observe him through the window.
Declan had jumped over the fence at Yewdale Farm and attacked a staff member.
In February 2022, CareTech said it could no longer meet Declanâs needs and that he needed clinical care.
According to the familyâs lawyer, 67 facilities across the UK were contacted for Declanâs care, but none were able to give him an appointment.
In a letter to the government and the NHSThe coroner said: âDemand for such placements exceeds supply â providers are effectively able to âchooseâ who they provide placement to.â
âIt seems wrong that a care provider can remove care without hesitation, because there is certainly no safety net behind it, because it is not provided by local government,â Mr Morrison said.
âIt canât be as simple as âwe canât keep your son or daughter safeâ,â he said.
CareTech said it did not âpick and chooseâ its residents.

In March 2022, Declan suffered severe anxiety and police officers took him into custody under the Mental Health Act.
He was taken to an emergency âplace of safetyâ, known as the Section 136 suite, on the site of Fulbourn Hospital in Cambridgeshire.
This suite is designed for patients awaiting mental health evaluation. Declan stayed there for 10 days instead of the scheduled 24 hours.
Declanâs parents were in Aberdeen at the time but his father said he was told he was âdoing fineâ.
âHit his head repeatedlyâ

The familyâs lawyer Saoirse Kerrigan said Declan had started âbouncing off the wallsâ, resulting in a catastrophic brain injury.
Ms Kerrigan, of law firm Leigh Day, said: âThese injuries occurred while Declan was being monitored by eight CCTV cameras and 24-hour monitoring by nursing staff based within the site.â
He said he was becoming âincreasingly agitated and hitting his head repeatedlyâ.

âhighest priorityâ
coronerâs Prevention of future deaths report Said Declan went into deep distress due to the mental health suite and âultimately died as a resultâ.
Cambridgeshire County Council and the NHS in Cambridgeshire and Peterborough said they had accepted it.
The two organizations said the learning disability and autism improvement program will be rolled out from spring 2025.
Cambridgeshire and Peterborough NHS Foundation Trust, which runs mental health services, said it had tightened procedures to improve patient care when a person spends more than 24 hours in a section 136 suite.
Kisimul acknowledged problems with âthe loss of key staffâ, stating that this was partly caused by Brexit and competing industries.
Kisimulâs director of quality and practice, Nicky Cooper, said the welfare of people receiving help from the service is the âtop priorityâ.
The Department of Health and Social Care said something new mental health bill This will âimprove monitoring of people with learning disabilities and autism who may be at risk of going into crisisâ.
The bill would legally require the NHS and local authorities to ensure that the needs of people like Declan are met without detaining them in hospital.
NHS England said it happened guidelines prepared and was âcarefully consideringâ the coronerâs report.
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