Urgent improvements are needed, say grieving mums
- mrsalex05061
- Jun 18, 2022
- 2 min read
The mothers of two teenage boys who died after failures in their care have called on the government to make “urgent improvements” to how children with disabilities are assessed.

Sammy Alban-Stanley and Oskar Nash were both failed by authorities.
Sammy Alban-Stanley, 13, and 14-year-old Oskar Nash both died in 2020.
Both boys’ inquiries recorded that they had received inadequate care from local authorities and mental health services.
The calls were made in an open letter to the state’s health, social care, and education secretaries.
Both departments have been contacted for comment.
Patricia Alban and Natalia Nash asked Sajid Javid and Nadim Zahawi to make fundamental changes to several care areas to prevent future deaths.

Patricia Alban previously said her son Sammy’s death was ‘preventable.’
The pair said they both experienced problems with support for disabled children and families.
Services lacked understanding of neurological conditions like autism, they said.
The pair also pointed to a lack of access to Children and Adolescent Mental Health Services and failure to assess or review the severity of a child’s developing needs.
Sammy Alban-Stanley, from Kent, had autism and a rare genetic condition called Prader-Willi Syndrome, both of which caused high-risk behaviour and saw him try to take his own life on multiple occasions.
He died after falling from a harbour wall in Ramsgate, Kent, in April 2020.
Oskar Nash, from Surrey, had Asperger’s syndrome, an autism spectrum disorder, and took his own life on a railway near Egham, Surrey, in January of the same year.
He had talked about suicide from the age of six. Still, his emotional and mental health was never clinically assessed from age three, despite several requests to Children and Adolescent Mental Health Services throughout his lifetime.
Ms Nash said that throughout her son Oskar’s life, there was “no understanding of his condition by any of the bodies engaged in his care” and “no appreciation for the other challenges Oskar faced because of his condition.”
Ms Nash added: “This is not going to change for other children in the same situation without hiring autism specialists that can guide other staff members and provide vital knowledge and training daily whilst preparing care plans for children in need.”
Ms Alban welcomed the collaboration with Ms Nash. She said she hoped they could “be a force for good in creating an accountable and fair system in the UK under which disabled children do not continue to suffer and die unnatural preventable deaths.”



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