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Polkinghorne trial: 'Vicious circle' of sleep deprivation may have upped suicide risk, expert says

Author
Craig Kapitan,
Publish Date
Thu, 12 Sep 2024, 9:03pm

Polkinghorne trial: 'Vicious circle' of sleep deprivation may have upped suicide risk, expert says

Author
Craig Kapitan,
Publish Date
Thu, 12 Sep 2024, 9:03pm

WARNING: DISTRESSING CONTENT

Pauline Hanna might have been caught in 鈥渁 vicious circle鈥 in the weeks before her death in which her disrupted sleep pattern - confirmed by a series of middle-of-the-night work emails - was increasing the risk for suicidal thoughts.

Dr David Menkes, a Yale University-trained expert in psychological medicine, took jurors through an analysis of Hanna鈥檚 suicide risk factors today as he was called to testify for the defence in the Philip Polkinghorne murder trial.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a whole array of difficult risk factors that are in combination,鈥 the University of Auckland professor said of Hanna, who was found dead in the couple鈥檚 home on April 5, 2021. 鈥淚 can say with confidence she had multiple risk factors at that point.鈥

Polkinghorne, now 71, is accused in the High Court at Auckland of having fatally strangled his wife of 24 years before staging the scene to look like a suicide by hanging. Prosecutors have alleged he had been using some of the $13,000 worth of methamphetamine found inside their Remuera home when he lashed out at Hanna, possibly getting on her back and choking her as she slept in a separate bedroom.

Although the Crown is not required to establish a motive, much of the circumstantial case has focused on the surgeon鈥檚 extravagant spending on sex workers and his alleged 鈥渄ouble life鈥 with Sydney escort Madison Ashton, who exchanged intimate WhatsApp messages with him in the days following his wife鈥檚 death.

The defence, which has been calling witnesses for just over two weeks now, has insisted that Hanna killed herself just as the scene suggested. She had a long history of depression, an intensely stressful job that some witnesses have said she was struggling with and she was taking what two mental health professionals have now described as a dangerous combination of sleeping pills, weight loss drugs, anti-depressants and alcohol.

Menkes, the final of three witnesses to give evidence today, cited a recent study on disturbed sleep patterns.

鈥淎 particular link has been found with suicidal thinking,鈥 he said, explaining that the study found even one night of bad sleep can cause a spike in suicidal thoughts the next day.

Disturbed sleep can be a symptom of depression and anxiety, but it can also aggravate them, contributing to mood instabity - hence the vicious circle, Menkes said.

The academic psychiatrist said he didn鈥檛 believe Hanna had a serious depressive illness but he agreed with defence lawyer Ron Mansfield KC that such a diagnosis wasn鈥檛 necessary to have suicidal thoughts.

The two went over 20 years of Hanna鈥檚 medical history, including 67 prescriptions for anti-depressant Prozac and 55 prescriptions for an amphetamine-based weight loss drug intended only for short-term use in part due to its addictive qualities.

鈥淭hey keep people awake and they can produce a degree of mood instability,鈥 he said of the weight loss drug.

He also noted medications in 2013 and 2014 intended to reduce - and then altogether restrict - alcohol intake. One note on her medical file said she reported drinking at least a bottle of wine on most evenings for the past 10 years or so with frequent blackouts. He described it as 鈥渇airly convincing evidence for alcohol use disorder with dependence鈥.

Intimate relationship stresses, work stress and in some cases, the recent death of a relative can be risk factors for suicide as well, he said, describing them as 鈥渁 combination of risk factors that coincided鈥.

But one of the most concerning risk factors, he said, was her long-term use of sleep pill Zopiclone - a prescription-only medication that was in her husband鈥檚 name - combined with alcohol use. A hair sample taken after death suggested she had been taking the drug repeatedly for at least six months.

鈥淭o me, that鈥檚 highly significant,鈥 he said, explaining that it interacts strongly with alcohol and can both worsen depression and increase disinhibition - resulting in 鈥渁 considerable risk of harm鈥.

Menkes is expected to return to the witness box tomorrow for cross-examination.

His evidence followed two IT experts - one for police and another for the defence - who were at loggerheads for most of the day as lawyers took turns quizzing them on a single narrow issue: Was Hanna using her phone at 4am on the morning she died?

The defence has suggested that she was on the phone at that time and that she went into the messaging app, perhaps contemplating drafting a goodbye note before suicide. No messages were ever sent and no drafts were found on her phone, but phone logs show the phone twice running an 鈥渋Message identity lookup鈥 service at that time.

Police expert Jun Lee said it wasn鈥檛 possible she was on the phone because there were no logs indicating the device had been turned on or moved during those hours. He concluded it must have been something that was running in the background while the phone was asleep.

But Sydney-based defence expert Atakan 鈥淎rtie鈥 Shahho said the opposite was true. An 鈥渋Message identity lookup鈥 will only be triggered if a user is in the app, he insisted. He said there were some 鈥減erplexing鈥 peculiarities with the data, suggesting the police efforts to 鈥渏ailbreak鈥 the phone - gaining access without the passcode - might have resulted in destroyed activity logs.

At the end of the day, the two experts had made no progress towards bridging their differences, leaving jurors to decide whose explanation - if either - to trust.

The trial, before Justice Graham Lang and the jury, continues tomorrow with more defence witnesses.

聽is an Auckland-based journalist covering courts and justice. He joined the聽Herald聽in 2021 and has reported on courts since 2002 in three newsrooms in the US and New Zealand.

罢丑别听Herald聽will be covering the case in a daily podcast,听. You can follow the podcast at聽,听,听, through聽聽feed, or wherever you get your podcasts.

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