The family of Christie Harnett, pictured at Downing Street in 2022, have long campaigned for an inquiry into her death. ayfun Salcı/Zuma Press/Rex/ShutterstockThe family of Christie Harnett, pictured at Downing Street in 2022, have long campaigned for an inquiry into her death. ayfun Salcı/Zuma Press/Rex/ShutterstockInquiry to be held into north-east England NHS trust after patient deathsHealth secretary announces investigation into Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys trust that has seen young patients take their own livesA public inquiry will be held into the failures of a north-east NHS foundation after the deaths of several patients, Wes Streeting has confirmed. The health secretary made the announcement in Darlington, speaking to the families of patients who died while receiving treatment from hospitals run by Tees, Esk and Wear Valleys NHS foundation trust, which is headquartered in the County Durham town. The inquiry will look into the number of the trust’s patients who took their own lives in the past decade, which the Department of Health and Social Care called “concerning”. Three of the people known to have died while under the trust’s care were the 17-year-olds Nadia Sharif and Christie Harnett, who killed themselves at West Lane hospital in Middlesbrough in June and August 2019 respectively, and 18-year-old Emily Moore, who died in February 2020 after a week at Lanchester Road hospital in County Durham. Speaking in Darlington, Streeting called the deaths unacceptable and said that families’ “courageous and tireless campaigning” had been “nothing short of inspirational”.“Everyone receiving mental healthcare should get safe, high-quality care and be treated with dignity and respect,” said the health secretary.