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NHS trust fined £565,000 after woman killed herself on ‘death trap’ ward

about 14 hours ago
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A woman whose daughter killed herself on a “death trap” mental health ward in London has called for urgent change after an NHS trust was fined more than half a million pounds.Alice Figueiredo, 22, took her own life at Goodmayes hospital, Redbridge, after 18 similar attempts.Her death on 7 July 2015 followed a failure to remove plastic items from the communal toilets on Hepworth ward that had been used by her to self-harm, a court was told.On Tuesday, North East London NHS foundation trust (NELFT) was fined £565,000 plus £200,000 in costs after being found guilty of breaching health and safety.In setting the amount, Judge Richard Marks KC noted its finances were in an “absolutely parlous state” and a large fine could affect its services.

Benjamin Aninakwa, 54, a ward manager, was convicted of failing to take reasonable care for the health and safety of patients on the ward that Figueiredo was on.Marks sentenced him to six months in prison, suspended for 12 months, plus 300 hours of unpaid work.Speaking outside the Old Bailey, Jane Figueiredo said her daughter had been confined to a “death trap” that was “a fatality waiting to happen”.Rather than being given the “compassion, care and support” she needed, Figueiredo was “failed horribly and experienced a litany of failures which crushed her spirit and ended her life”, her mother said.Jane Figueiredo added that her daughter’s pleas for help were not taken seriously and were “regularly shut down, silenced”.

She said: “People behind the locked doors on mental health wards are some of the least seen and heard people in our communities and society.And their voices are all too easily dismissed, used against them or silenced.”In his televised sentencing remarks, Marks described Figueiredo as a “beautiful vibrant young woman” who was “hugely talented” and had an “extremely” attractive personality.He added: “Her death at such a young age in the circumstances in which it occurred is a terrible tragedy.”The judge said the accessibility of plastic in the communal toilets was a “very serious problem”, adding: “I am in no doubt that there was a complete failure to adequately assess and manage the risk that this posed.

”Keeping the communal area temporarily locked while Figueiredo was on the ward would not have posed a problem beyond one of “inconvenience”, the judge said.Marks added that Aninakwa had also failed to address the “major concerns” of Figueiredo’s mother that should have “rung major alarm bells”.He told the defendant: “You knew that she was suicidal – she was the only patient on the ward that was.Your negligent breach of duty went on for weeks.” The judge took into account the 10-year delay in the case in his decision to suspend Aninakwa’s jail sentence.

Figueiredo was first admitted to the Hepworth ward in May 2012 with a diagnosis including non-specific eating disorder and bipolar affective disorder.During her time on the acute psychiatric ward, the trust failed to remove plastic items from the communal toilets or keep them locked despite repeated suicide attempts.Aninakwa, who was subject to a performance improvement plan, had also failed to ensure incidents of self-harm were recorded, considered and addressed, jurors heard.The trust and Aninakwa, of Grays in Essex, denied wrongdoing but declined to give evidence.The investigation into Figueiredo’s death began in 2016 but charges were not brought until September 2023.

NELFT was cleared of corporate manslaughter and Aninakwa was found not guilty of manslaughter by gross negligence.In the UK and Ireland, Samaritans can be contacted on freephone 116 123, or email jo@samaritans.org or jo@samaritans.ie.In the US, you can call or text the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at 988 or chat at 988lifeline.

org.In Australia, the crisis support service Lifeline is 13 11 14.Other international helplines can be found at befrienders.org
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The race begins to make the world’s best self-driving cars

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. I’m your host, Blake Montgomery, writing to you from Barcelona, where my diet has transformed at least half my body into ham.We are on the verge of the global arrival of self-driving cars. Next year, major firms from both the US and China will deploy their robotaxis to metropolises around the world, in major expansions of their existing operations. These companies are posturing in the press like male birds fighting for the same mate; the dance sets the stage for the global competition to come

about 17 hours ago
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Datacenters meet resistance over environmental concerns as AI boom spreads in Latin America

This Q&A originally appeared as part of The Guardian’s TechScape newsletter. Sign up for this weekly newsletter here.The datacenters that power the artificial intelligence boom are beyond enormous. Their financials, their physical scale, and the amount of information contained within are so massive that the idea of stopping their construction can seem like opposing an avalanche in progress.Despite the scale and momentum of the explosion of datacenters, resistance is mounting in the United States, in the United Kingdom, and in Latin America, where datacenters have been built in some of the world’s driest areas

1 day ago
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Can OpenAI keep pace with industry’s soaring costs?

It is the $1.4tn (£1.1tn) question. How can a loss-making startup such as OpenAI afford such a staggering spending commitment?Answer that positively and it will go a long way to easing investor concerns over bubble warnings in the artificial intelligence boom, from lofty tech company valuations to a mooted $3tn global spend on datacentres.The company behind ChatGPT needs a vast amount of computing power – or compute, in tech jargon – to train its models, produce their responses and build even more powerful systems in the future

1 day ago
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Tech giants vow to defend users in US as spyware companies make inroads with Trump administration

Apple and WhatsApp have vowed to keep warning users if their mobile phones are targeted by governments using hacking software against them, including in the US, as two spyware makers seek to make inroads with the Trump administration.The two technology giants made their statements in response to queries from the Guardian as the two cyberweapons makers – both founded in Israel and now owned by American investors – are aggressively pursuing access to the US market.Paragon Solutions, which makes a spyware called Graphite, already cemented a deal with the Trump administration in September to give US immigration agents access to one of the world’s most sophisticated hacking tools, after the Department of Homeland lifted a freeze on a $2m contract with ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement).Paragon did not respond to requests for comment.Another company, NSO Group, which was accused by the Biden administration in 2021 of engaging in business that was “contrary to the national security or foreign policy interests of the US”, announced this weekend that David Friedman, the US ambassador to Israel during Donald Trump’s first term, had agreed to become executive chairman of the holding company that owns NSO

1 day ago
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Elon Musk makes himself far-right fixture after White House departure

The Tesla CEO once hinted he was done with politics – but he’s been leaning further into the international far rightWhen the far-right activist Tommy Robinson emerged from a London courtroom this week after a judge cleared him of a terrorism charge, he gave thanks to the man he said had bankrolled his defense.“Elon Musk, I’m forever grateful. If you didn’t step in and fund my legal fight I’d probably be in jail,” Robinson said. “Thank you, Elon.”In the period immediately after Musk’s messy departure from the White House, the Tesla CEO repeatedly suggested that he was done with politics

4 days ago
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ChatGPT accused of acting as ‘suicide coach’ in series of US lawsuits

ChatGPT has been accused of acting as a “suicide coach” in a series of lawsuits filed this week in California alleging that interactions with the chatbot led to severe mental breakdowns and several deaths.The seven lawsuits include allegations of wrongful death, assisted suicide, involuntary manslaughter, negligence and product liability.Each of the seven plaintiffs initially used ChatGPT for “general help with schoolwork, research, writing, recipes, work, or spiritual guidance”, according to a joint statement from the Social Media Victims Law Center and Tech Justice Law Project, which filed the lawsuits in California on Thursday.Over time, however, the chatbot “evolved into a psychologically manipulative presence, positioning itself as a confidant and emotional support”, the groups said.“Rather than guiding people toward professional help when they needed it ChatGPT reinforced harmful delusions, and, in some cases, acted as a ‘suicide coach’

5 days ago
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Children being ‘sedated’ by algorithmic YouTube content, MPs hear

about 12 hours ago
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David Lammy says 91 prisoners freed in error in England and Wales since April

about 13 hours ago
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NHS trust fined £565,000 after woman killed herself on ‘death trap’ ward

about 14 hours ago
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UK 18- to 24-year-olds: we would like to hear your experiences of trying to find a job

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Paperwork blunder by UK bookmaker reveals possible illegal offshore operation

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Crime gangs in UK making weight-loss drugs with ‘sophisticated’ fake branding

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