The Journal Investigates: Suicide Prevention. Those who have made contact with HSE services yet go on to commit suicide. Tonight second part about mental illness, prisons et al in Ireland at 9.30 pm on RTE 1

Investigates Suicide Prevention

Hundreds of people died by suspected suicide after recent contact with HSE services

Almost 450 suicides were reported to the HSE between 2022 and 2024 by healthcare staff across a range of patient services, including Emergency Departments.

12.02am, 10 Feb 2026

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HUNDREDS OF PATIENTS died by suspected suicide shortly after being in contact with healthcare services in Ireland, internal HSE figures reveal.

Documents obtained by The Journal Investigates show that 449 suspected suicides were recorded on the HSE’s internal reporting system between 2022 and 2024.

The incidents – recorded under the National Incident Management System (NIMS) – are logged by staff when a death occurs within three weeks of contact with a patient with mental health difficulties.

They are not publicly reported, and don’t appear in official suicide figures until after a coroner’s inquest officially determines a cause of death, which can take place months or even years later.

The Journal Investigates has found that Ireland’s mental health system routinely funnels those in suicidal crisis through busy Emergency Departments [EDs], with little capacity to track or protect them after they leave.

It comes just weeks after the National Self Harm Registry revealed that more than one-third of those attending emergency departments with self harm injuries were not assessed by a mental health professional during their visit.

Families of those who have lost loved ones say this critical gap in Ireland’s suicide-prevention system must now be fixed to save lives.

“This system is understaffed, under-resourced and overwhelmed,” Joe Loughnane, whose brother Adam took his own life last year, told The Journal Investigates.

“But that doesn’t mean we accept people dying as collateral damage.” 

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Attended ED 60 times in one year

In Ireland, official figures surrounding deaths by suicide are only published by the Central Statistics Office (CSO).

It shows that in 2022, 436 suicides were registered, while provisional data for 2023 records 453 deaths.

These figures are subject to change due to the fact that suicide can only be ruled as a cause of death by a coroner, with inquests taking some time to complete.

The CSO data captures all confirmed suicides nationally, regardless of whether the person had any recent contact with health services.

By contrast, NIMS captures deaths logged by healthcare staff as suspected suicides where services were aware that the person had recent contact with mental health services.

This can include hospital-based liaison psychiatry teams, in-patient mental health units, community mental health teams and Emergency Departments.

While the two datasets are not directly comparable, the NIMS figures point to a substantial number of people who died after actively engaging with medical staff, highlighting the critical risk period following contact or discharge.

Noeleen Eustace knows of that risk all too well.

In May last year, her 26-year-old son Kelvin Brennan died just weeks after telling a psychiatrist he was suicidal.

In the years leading up to Kelvin’s death, his mother said she attended hundreds of medical and emergency room appointments alongside him while he was in crisis.

“In one year alone, I presented with him to Naas General Hospital A&E at least 60 times,” she told The Journal Investigates.

I remember one time in the waiting room, I just sat and held him. I said, ‘I have to keep him alive’.

When asked about the family’s experience, HSE Dublin and Midlands Region – which oversees Naas General Hospital – said it does not comment on individual cases.

However, a spokesperson stated that all people presenting to Emergency Departments with suicidal ideation follow a “standard care pathway”, including clinical assessment and referral to liaison mental health services.

image5Kelvin Brennan took his own life in May last year after years of ED attendances. Noeleen Eustace

No coordination of services

Kelvin’s mental health struggles did not appear out of nowhere. Eustace described how from a young age, she repeatedly brought him to GPs, therapists and mental health services, warning that something was deeply wrong with her son.

He struggled to sleep, regulate his emotions, and cope with overwhelming anxiety. At just five-years-old, Kelvin was referred to Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services (CAMHS).

Despite years of contact, he was not formally diagnosed with Asperger’s Syndrome – which was considered a form of autism up until the 2010s and is now recognised as autism spectrum disorder – until his teens.

This diagnosis, alongside generalised anxiety, dyspraxia and sensory processing disorder, was only made after his mother sought out a private assessment.

“When I rang CAMHS to tell them he’d been diagnosed with Asperger’s, they said: ‘Yeah, we were kind of thinking that,’” she said.

I remember thinking: When were you going to tell me?

In a statement to The Journal Investigates, a CAMHS spokesperson said its service is designed to “treat moderate to severe” mental health presentations and does not assess autism.

Autism evaluation and diagnosis is primarily carried out by Primary Care Services here.

It declined to comment further on Noeleen Eustace’s concerns, citing confidentiality issues.

blurred-frame-5Kelvin Brennan from Co Kildare pictured with his mum Noeleen. Noeleen Eustace

‘No man’s land’

By the time Kelvin reached his teenage years, he was explicitly telling clinicians, and his mother, that he wanted to die.

As he grew older, Kelvin’s mental health deteriorated further, with extreme emotional dysregulation, sleep deprivation, and later substance misuse – a pattern Eustace says health services failed to respond to in any coordinated way.

When Kelvin turned 18, he fell into what she describes as “no man’s land” – too old for CAMHS, but not taken on by adult services.

“For nine months, there was nothing,” she said. “No support. No pathway.”

In April last year, a month before his death, Kelvin again told clinicians that he was suicidal. His mother claims he was signposted to a self-referral support service.

“Four weeks later, he was dead,” Eustace said. “He should have been sectioned [involuntarily detained], and I believe if we were in the UK instead of Ireland, he would have been.”

A hospital spokesperson again declined to directly comment on the 26-year-old’s case, but did state that Emergency Departments prioritise patients based on “clinical severity”.

The spokesperson also pointed to national programmes aimed at improving crisis care, including liaison mental health services in hospitals, suicide crisis assessment nurses, and community-based crisis resolution services.

HSE Dublin and Midlands said these are intended to provide “assessment, safety planning and alternatives to hospital” admission as part of ongoing service development.

screenshotNoeleen Eustace pictured with her son Kelvin who passed away in May 2025. Noeleen Eustace

Triaged and made to wait

Figures gathered by the National Self-Harm Registry Ireland (NSHR) show the demand for mental health services in emergency care.

Last year, an estimated 12,621 self-harm presentations were made to ED departments by 9,436 individuals.

Almost half of those resulted in discharge directly from an ED, while one-in-seven patients left before any next-care recommendation could be made.

Crucially, the NSHR research shows that suicide risk is highest immediately following hospital attendance.

On 11 February last year, Adam Loughnane attended the Emergency Department at University Hospital Galway. He was in the midst of a mental health crisis.

The 34-year-old from Galway had packed an overnight bag, believing he would be admitted to hospital.

Instead, Adam was triaged and told to wait in an overcrowded ED. He didn’t stay, and within half an hour of leaving the hospital, he was dead.

“What has haunted us ever since is that two hours before he was found, he was sitting in that waiting room asking for help,” his brother Joe told The Journal Investigates.

He later learned that Adam had presented to the same Emergency Department as suicidal on four previous occasions since 2015.

The hospital is currently carrying out a review into Adam’s death.

A spokesperson said: “While we cannot comment on individual cases, UGH management and staff offer our sincere condolences to the family of this patient.

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“This matter is now under review and we are engaging directly with the family. In the interests of patient confidentiality, it would be inappropriate to comment further.”

image4Adam Loughnane from Galway who passed away in February last year after attending University Hospital Galway’s Emergency Department. Joe Loughnane

Mental health EDs needed

In the weeks following Adam’s death, his brother launched a petition calling for an end to those in mental health crises being treated in general Emergency Departments.

Joe Loughnane compiled a 54-page pre-budget submission building a case for mental health EDs in Ireland.

The document – titled ‘Adam’s Protocols’ – maps every pathway available to someone in suicidal distress. It shows that every route leads back to an Emergency Department.

“If you go to a GP, you’re sent to A&E,” he said. “If you go to an out-of-hours GP, you’re sent to A&E. If you go to a crisis café and say you’re suicidal, you’re sent to A&E.”

The report – which Loughnane said received no responses from any TDs he contacted – points to successful mental health models already operating in some parts of England and the US.

These include standalone, 24/7 mental health emergency units staffed by psychiatric teams, separate from general emergency departments.

His submission estimates that piloting such a unit in Ireland could cost as little as €1.7 million – a fraction of the HSE’s €1.5 billion health budget.

He said: “What Adam needed wasn’t a trolley.

He needed one trained person, in a room, to stop him from dying.

The family’s petition has received almost 21,000 signatures in support of the proposals.

In a statement to The Journal Investigates, Minister of State for Mental Health Mary Butler extended her sympathies to both families, adding that the Department of Health is working with the HSE to “expand alternatives to emergency departments”.

The Minister also said enhanced surveillance systems, including a register of deaths among mental health service users, are planned but not yet operational, and highlighted ongoing work to strengthen regulation of mental health services and expand dual-diagnosis supports.

image3Minister for Health Jennifer Carroll MacNeill and Minister of State for Mental Health Mary Butler speaking at a briefing on the budget for her Department in October. Rollingnews.ie

Increase in under-12s self-harming

Last year, a report by the Mental Health Commission (MHC) concluded that there is “no consistent level of mental health service” across Emergency Departments in Ireland.

MHC found that out-of-hours care is weaker and delays common, with psychiatric support often provided by on-call community teams rather than ED-based staff.

Discharge, the report states, is the default outcome. Follow-up is recommended, but not guaranteed, it said.

Meanwhile, the system not only continues to cope with persistently high demand, but growing complexity.

Professor Ella Arensman, chief scientist at the National Suicide Research Foundation, warned that Ireland is now seeing a rapid increase in self-harm among children under 12.

“There is a fast, speeding increase of self-harm, including children under the age of 12,” she said.

One third of these children already present with repeated acts of self-harm – something we never observed two decades ago.

She warned that early hospital presentations are now being followed by an escalation in suicidal ideation, underlining the need for specialist intervention long before crisis point.

Despite the scale of the issue, deaths following hospital contact remain statistically invisible for years.

At present, both Adam Loughnane and Kelvin Brennan’s deaths have not been formally recorded as suicides.

Both families will now have to wait until a coroner officially declares their cause of deaths, long after intervention might have saved their lives.

If you need to talk, contact:

Pieta House 1800 247 247 or email mary@pieta.ie
Samaritans 116 123 or email jo@samaritans.org
Aware 1800 80 48 48
Teen-Line Ireland 1800 833 634 (for ages 13 to 19)
Childline 1800 66 66 66 (for under 18s)

The Journal Investigates

Reporter: Patricia Devlin • Editor: Noel Baker  • Video: Nicky Ryan • Social Media: Cliodhna Travers • Main Image Design: Lorcan O’Reilly

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Ireland in Freefall. Broken Ireland.

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Extra.ie. To those who have the courage to watch the second part of the Prime Time Programme on RTE 1 tonight at 9.30 pm. Mentally ill people were promised when the Institutions which at one time had 20,000 residents, care in the community. Community based on last night’s programme is more about care or non provision of care in prisons. Too many suicides never spoken about. Shame on us to have allowed such a deterioration in the provision for people with mental illness, left to predators and abusers but then this too is the untold story.

The number of acutely mentally ill and actively psychotic people in prison now far exceeds the number of available medical cells in these facilities, figures released to RTÉ revealed.

Central Mental Hospital Dundrum
The old Central Mental Hospital in Dundrum, Dublin. Pic: RollingNews.ie

In the last quarter of 2025, the number of people in prison waiting for admission to the new CMH, which opened in late 2022 at a cost of almost a quarter of a billion euros, was at its highest level since before the closure of the old hospital in Dundrum, Dublin, in 2022.

More than 340 psychiatric patients are currently being held across the prison system, and those 38 people mentally ill enough to require treatment in the new centre in Portrane are instead being kept in prisons around the country on a lengthy waiting list.

Families of those forced to rely on prisons for psychiatric care have come forward to speak out against the conditions in which they are kept.

The new Central Mental Hospital in Portrane, north Dublin. Pic: RTÉ

Among those are the families of several psychiatric patients who died in Dublin’s Cloverhill Prison over a five-year period and who are demanding answers regarding the circumstances of their care and their deaths.

Figures show the rate of prisoners with acute mental illness in custody has increased dramatically in recent years. In the country’s dedicated remand centre, Cloverhill Prison, there is a medical landing with capacity for 27 people but in recent months there have been more than 55 actively psychotic people held in custody simultaneously.

This is ten times higher than it was a decade ago and has tripled in the last four years alone.

Cloverhill Prison. Photo: Rolling news.
At the country’s dedicated remand centre, Cloverhill Prison, there is a medical landing with a capacity of 27 people. Pic: RollingNews.ie

The in-reach psychiatric team in Cloverhill Prison is led by Professor Conor O’Neill, who told the RTÉ Investigates documentary: ‘Some of the most severe mental illnesses are conditions like schizophrenia and related conditions like disaffected disorder and bipolar disorder.

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‘These are some of the worst mental health conditions you can have where people can hear and see things that aren’t real. It’s usually voices saying abusive or threatening things. Some of these people are severely mentally ill.

‘Some people have brain injuries and dementias and are unable to look after themselves. These are people that should be in hospital, not in prison.’

The HSE said it remains committed to ensuring that every person receives the right care, in the right place, at the right time.

A statement on behalf of Health Minister Jennifer Carroll MacNeill said: ‘While the Department of Health and the HSE fully appreciate the increasing demands on the prison service, it is important to stress that the NFMHS [National Forensic Mental Health Service] campus in Portrane is a specialist tertiary healthcare facility.

‘This facility is approved for the purposes of the Mental Health Act 2001 and the Criminal Law (Insanity) Act 2006 and every effort will continue to be made by the health sector to help address acknowledged waiting list pressures to access the NFMHS overall.

‘Minister Carroll MacNeill, Minister [Mary] Butler and officials in the Department of Health will continue to work collaboratively with the Minister for Justice and his department to further improve and develop the provision of specialist psychiatric care for people in prison and to build upon the very good joint progress both sectors have made over recent years.’

Irish prison overcrowding branded ‘severe’ in new documents

The HSE acknowledged ‘the issues that have been raised in relation to HSE mental health services and regret any impact this may have had on people and their families’.

It said that because prisons are neither ‘approved centres’ or ‘designated centres’ in law, in-reach prison clinicians cannot prescribe or initiate certain medications that require the legal protections.

As of yesterday, there were 5,742 prisoners in custody across the system, with 519 mattresses on the floor. A total of 35 prisoners were on date-to-date temporary release, 570 were on temporary release, and 1,227 were on trial or remand.

The total number of prisoners in the system was recorded as 6,519, compared with a national bed capacity of 4,726.

RTÉ Investigates: The Psychiatric Care Scandal is on RTÉ One at 9.35 pm tonight.

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The Harvard Gazette: New AI tool predicts brain age, dementia risk, cancer survival 

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New AI tool predicts brain age, dementia risk, cancer survival 

Close up of robotic hand pointing and clicking at brain holographic to access medical data or diagnosis symptom.

Mass General Brigham Communications

February 5, 2026 3 min read

Unlike other AI models, BrainIAC needs limited data to ID key neurological health indicators

A new AI foundation model has been developed that can accurately extract multiple disease risk signals from routine brain MRIs, including: estimating a person’s “brain age”; predicting dementia risk; detecting brain tumor mutations; and predicting survival from brain cancer, according to investigators from Harvard-affiliated Mass General Brigham.

The model, a brain imaging adaptive core called BrainIAC, was trained on nearly 49,000 brain MRI scans. The tool outperformed other, more task-specific AI models, and was especially efficient when limited training data were available. 

Results are published in Nature Neuroscience.

According to researchers, despite recent advances in medical AI approaches, there is a lack of publicly available models that focus on broad, brain MRI analysis. Most conventional frameworks perform specific tasks and require extensive training with large, annotated datasets that can be hard to obtain. Furthermore, brain MRI images from different institutions can vary in appearance and based on their intended applications (such as in neurology versus oncology care), making it challenging for AI frameworks to learn similar information from them.

To address these limitations, BrainIAC uses a method called self-supervised learning to identify inherent features from unlabeled datasets, which can then be adapted to a range of applications. After pretraining the framework on multiple brain MRI imaging datasets, the researchers validated its performance on 48,965 diverse brain MRI scans across seven distinct tasks of varying clinical complexity.

Researchers found that BrainIAC could successfully generalize its learnings across healthy and abnormal images and subsequently apply them to both relatively straightforward tasks, such as classifying MRI scan types, and very challenging tasks, such as detecting brain tumor mutation types. The model also outperformed three more conventional, task-specific AI frameworks at these applications and others.

The authors note that BrainIAC was especially good at predicting outcomes when training data was scarce or task complexity was high, suggesting that the model could adapt well to real-world settings where annotated medical datasets are not always readily available. Further research is needed to test this framework on additional brain imaging methods and larger datasets.

“BrainIAC has the potential to accelerate biomarker discovery, enhance diagnostic tools, and speed the adoption of AI in clinical practice,” said corresponding author Benjamin Kann of the Artificial Intelligence in Medicine (AIM) Program at MGB and associate professor of radiation oncology at Harvard Medical School. “Integrating BrainIAC into imaging protocols could help clinicians better personalize and improve patient care.”


This study was supported in part by the National Institutes of Health/the National Cancer Institute and Botha-Chan Low Grade Glioma Consortium.

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Axios: US Department of Energy … scientific discovery

Working with the US Department of Energy to unlock the next era of scientific discovery

18 Dec 2025

Working with the US Department of Energy to unlock the next era of scientific discovery

Anthropic and the US Department of Energy (DOE) are announcing a multi-year partnership as part of the Genesis Mission— the Department’s initiative to use AI to cement America’s leadership in science. Our partnership focuses on three domains—American energy dominance, the biological and life sciences, and scientific productivity—and has the potential to affect the work being done at all 17 of America’s national laboratories.

The Genesis Mission recognizes that we are at a critical moment: as global competition in AI intensifies, America must harness its unmatched scientific infrastructure—from supercomputers to decades of experimental data—and combine it with frontier AI capabilities to maintain scientific leadership. Anthropic seeks to play a key role in this effort.

“Anthropic was founded by scientists who believe AI can deliver transformative progress for research itself,” said Jared Kaplan, Anthropic’s Chief Science Officer. “The Genesis Mission is the sort of ambitious, rigorous program where that belief gets tested. We’re honored to help advance science that benefits everyone.”

Brian Peters, Anthropic’s Head of North America Government Affairs, attended the Genesis Mission launch event today at the White House. We are looking forward to contributing to the mission and continuing to collaborate with DOE.

The partnership

Anthropic seeks to provide DOE researchers access both to Claude and to a team of Anthropic engineers, who can develop purpose-built tools, including:

  • AI “agents” (models that take actions) for DOE’s highest-priority challenges
  • Model Context Protocol servers that connect Claude to scientific instruments and tools
  • Claude Skills for specialized expertise on relevant scientific workflows

Claude can facilitate substantial advancements in:

  • Energy dominance. Claude can help with a broad range of tasks—from speeding up permitting review processes that bottleneck America’s energy expansion to helping scientists conduct research at the frontier of nuclear technology and strengthening domestic energy security.
  • Biological and life sciences. Claude can support the development of early-warning systems for future pandemics and biological threat detection, and be used to hasten the speed of drug discovery and development.
  • Scientific productivity. Claude has the capacity to access fifty years of DOE research, and use this context to accelerate the research cycle in strategically important domains and provide well-informed research support in the form of new ideas to trial out, or patterns in older data that humans might have missed.

Our commitment to partner with the US Government

Scientific progress has always driven America’s prosperity and security. Anthropic aspires to expand existing arrangements with DOE to build the next chapter: using AI across America’s research institutions, with deep context on scientists’ work and active support from our engineers.

Potential future arrangements would represent the next stage of Anthropic and DOE’s multi-year partnership. Past projects with DOE include co-development of a nuclear risk classifier with the National Nuclear Security Administration and rolling out Claude at the Lawrence Livermore national laboratory. As we learn from the current work with DOE’s, we’ll be able to develop a model for how AI and human researchers can work together—and feed this back into the development of the AI tools they use.

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Axios: Algorithms are controlling you feed. Here’s how to take it back

1 big thing: Control your reality
 
Illustration of a man holding a glitching earth where his head would be
Illustration: Sarah Grillo/Axios
 
This is the first in an Axios series on seizing control of your reality. The series will unfold in AM and Finish Line. Please watch our kickoff video here.
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In Japan’s schools… what can we learn?

Massimo

@Rainmaker1973

Did you know? In some Japan’s schools, education isn’t just about knowledge — it’s about character. For the first three years of school, children in these specific institutes don’t take academic exams at all. Instead, the focus is on respect, empathy, and moral values. Students learn to clean their classrooms, serve lunch to their peers, and care for their environment. Teachers emphasize teamwork, discipline, and gratitude — qualities considered as vital as academic success.

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Nigel Farage: People aren’t more productive working from home

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Financial Markets in China : what about gold. This is a shrewd move

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George Galloway talking to Shaun Attwood. Epstein Bread and Circuses but dig deeper

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