Katie Allen-Gyves found dead in bed by her mother in December last year (Image: Cedar Mount Academy)
An “immensely popular” teacher who complained of work-related stress ahead of an Ofsted inspection was found dead in her bed, an inquest has heard. Katie Allen-Gyves was discovered by her mother on December 6 last year, Stockport Coroners’ Court was told.
The inquest heard the 38-year-old mother-of-one spoke to her doctor about stress relating to her job and being up until the early hours marking work. Ms Allen-Gyves from Sale in Trafford, Greater Manchester, was the Special Educational Needs Coordinator (SENCO) at Cedar Mount Academy in Gorton. Senior coroner Alison Mutch recorded a verdict of “tragic accidental death”.
Katie Allen-Gyves was a teacher at Cedar Mount Academy in Gorton, Greater Manchester (Image: MEN)
The coroner said Ms Allen-Gyves was “under significant pressure at work and struggling to sleep” at the time.
Ms Mutch said the teacher died from “toxic effects of prescribed medication combined with the sedative effects of over-the-counter medication”, the Manchester Evening News reports.
She said there was no evidence of any kind of any intention on her part to take her own life – saying she was planning for Christmas and wrapping presents.
The coroner recorded a verdict of ‘tragic accidental death’ (Image: MEN)
The inquest heard Ms Allen-Gyves had totally transformed her life after an addiction and was taking prescribed medication to treat opioid use disorder, as well as prescribed medication for ADHD. A “significant level” of an over-the-counter medication was also found in test results after her death.
Ms Mutch said it was likely Ms Allen-Gyves, who also taught geography at the school and was a member of its senior leadership team, was trying to “manage down” her prescription at the same time as “self-medicating” to try to sleep.
“The two are not a good combination together,” the coroner said. “She was working very long hours, and when she was coming home, she was still working and was not sleeping very well.”
Ms Mutch said it was “quite clear” that Ms Allen-Gyves was “frustrated and angry at things” at work at the time.
“It is quite clear that Ofsted inspection was on her mind,” she added.
She described Ms Allen-Gyves as “clearly a very strong woman who had to deal with an awful lot in her life”.
“She had chosen to enter teaching as a profession,” added the coroner.
“What is very clear is that to be a teacher in this day and age is a really tough job. The demands and expectations are high, and the pressures are high. Katie was determined to be the best teacher she could be.”
Of her role as a SENCO, Ms Mutch said: “It is difficult to think of a more challenging job in a school environment. From what I have heard, Katie moved to Cedar Mount to make a difference. It was quite clearly an enormously challenging and stressful environment, but Katie wanted it to be a success.
“She wanted to carry on and she was determined that she was going to carry on.”
Bosses at a drug and alcohol recovery service described her as “fantastic to work with” and said she was “committed” and “determined” – and had been for years.
Ms Allen-Gyves was described as “immensely liked and very well thought of”, and the coroner said the fact she “turned her life around” should be “recognised by everyone”.
The inquest heard Ms Allen-Gyves had confided in her doctor before her death of being “up until 3am marking work”, saying that her stress was “work-related”.
But she didn’t inform the school or confide in colleagues there – apart from making a request to work one day a week at home, which the school’s leadership said would have been considered, the inquest heard.
In a statement, her GP Dr Julie Hobman said she was seen at the surgery five days before her death, where she complained of high blood pressure, according to the Manchester Evening News.
Dr Hobson said she told her that her school was “expecting Ofsted at any time” and that she had felt “stressed”.
A sick note running until April 2026 was issued after a diagnosis of hypertension, but the inquest heard she didn’t tell the school about it.
Police coroner’s officer Nicholas Belfield, giving evidence, said messages on her mobile phone were later examined.
Katie Allen-Gyves was described as an ‘immensely popular’ member of staff at the school (Image: Cedar Mount Academy)
Mr Belfield said of them: “There seems to be a bit of a pattern. She was struggling. She worried about her health. She was talking about her blood pressure being quite high and also, what I would say, perhaps, struggling to cope a little bit at work with work pressures, perhaps, and things that were going on within the workplace, and how she is performing at her job and struggling because of the pressure.”
He said other messages referenced her “frustrations” and the looming Ofsted inspection. “I think she was finding things a little bit frustrating, things that she was being asked to do ahead of that,” he said.
Mr Belfield also referenced her messages, saying she wasn’t being listened to.
Ms Allen-Gyves’s mum, Rebecca Gyves, said she was “extremely proud” of her daughter. “She was amazing and strong,” she added.
Giving evidence, she said she was “determined to do a good job” but said she noticed a change in her after the October half-term.
“I thought she was working too hard,” Mrs Gyves said. “We tried to address it with her, but she said, ‘I have to get this done.”
She said her daughter would stay up late to plan lessons and mark work and told how she tried to get her not to go back after Christmas, but “she refused”.
“She wanted to do a good job, and I know that she enjoyed the job and liked the staff,” added her mum.
Louise Stubbs, interim vice-principal at Cedar Mount, described Ms Allen-Gyves’ SENCO role as “a large job at any school”.
She was said to have settled in quickly with a large team around her and “quickly made her mark”.
“From the get-go, she was determined to make a difference,” said Ms Stubbs in evidence. She said Ms Allen-Gyves requested to work a day at home in November, and said they spoke about an “ad-hoc arrangement”.
Ms Stubbs said messages they shared, which she said weren’t included in the police’s bundle of evidence, showed “a very different picture”.
“She was an immensely popular member of staff,” she added. “Her team were right behind her. I knew she was working hard, but she was making a difference. She always seemed really happy in work to be honest.”
Ms Stubbs said that if Ms Allen-Gyves had told her about the sick note, she would have been fully supported.
The school’s principal, Stephen Garvey, said he had worked with Ms Allen-Gyves previously at a different school, calling her “exceptional, very gifted and very bright and passionate”.
“She was very, very diligent,” he said, giving evidence. “She wanted to plan and deliver excellent lessons, but do the SENCO as well.”
Mr Garvey said he “remained open” to her request to work a day at home and told the court he was “very surprised and quite upset” to learn of the messages on her phone, saying he was unaware of the situation.
Referencing a meeting they had the night before her death, he said he was “really determined to make sure that she was fully supported” through the flexible working plan.
“She was very bubbly on that day,” he said. “She seemed to be enjoying work. I did not believe Katie was unfit for work. She remained really committed all the time. I was not aware until now of her mental health troubles. The reflection point here is that Katie was struggling. I wish I knew. Immediately, that would have been a conversation.
“I was satisfied that she had all the tools and the support needed to do the job well.”
