Media release – Taylor Fry wins Best Public Sector Evaluation

By Elizabeth Finch
Business Development & Marketing
13 October 2025


By Elizabeth Finch - Business Development & Marketing
13 October 2025

URL has been copied successfully!
URL has been copied successfully!


By Elizabeth Finch
13 October 2025

URL has been copied successfully!
URL has been copied successfully!

The Australian Evaluation Society awarded our team, along with our partner ARTD Consultants, for their large mixed-method study centred on suicide prevention. Working with NSW Health, we evaluated six new initiatives that were part of the Government’s Towards Zero Suicides suite.

The Best Public Sector Evaluation recognises “exemplary evaluation work conducted within the Australasian public sector that has been used to effect real and observable changes in policies or programs”. Led by Hugh Miller, Ramona Meyricke and Dennis Lam, the resulting report linked state and Commonwealth data, offering a rare system-wide view of suicide prevention efforts in NSW.

Hugh Miller accepting the award at the AES event and after the win, with Dennis Lam

The six programs evaluated form part of the NSW Ministry of Health’s Towards Zero Suicides initiatives – a $2.9 billion, multi-year investment in mental health services. The Australian Evaluation Society (AES) said the work “strongly demonstrated change and contribution to knowledge at a broad scale”, including “practical tools and frameworks [to] guide future evaluation practice”. Our report was strengthened, it said, by the embedded nature of diverse experts, such as an Indigenous reference group and people with lived experience.

On accepting the award on behalf of Taylor Fry, Hugh said, “It was a long and sometimes challenging project but we delivered something pretty special. I’m particularly proud of the use of longitudinal linked data, as a way of understanding what happens to people before and after accessing a service or program, crucially important in this space.”

He said the evaluation also demonstrates that suicide prevention is everybody’s business. “More than half of the people who die by suicide do not have a suicide-related or mental health interaction with Commonwealth or state health systems in the year prior to death. This means that achieving large reductions in deaths also requires investment in strengthening our communities, looking out for the vulnerable and isolated, and ensuring our non-health government services are run in ways that are not harmful. Tough but worthy work.”

 

For a summary of the evaluation, view our article, NSW Ministry of Health releases Taylor Fry report.

Read the report in full – the overarching report Evaluation of Suicide Prevention Initiatives or the brief  Summary Report.

Visit the Australian Evaluation Society for more on the Best Public Sector Evaluation Award.


Other articles by
Elizabeth Finch

Other articles by Elizabeth Finch

More articles

Elizabeth Finch
Business Development & Marketing


RADAR FY2025 – Balance and meaningful action vital amid huge wins

Amid another high-profit year, RADAR FY2025 offers expert insights on the hot topics for insurers. Dive right in to find out more.

Read Article

Elizabeth Finch
Business Development & Marketing


Press release – Taylor Fry announces Canberra chief for government practice

An exciting new chapter for Taylor Fry with the launch of our office in the nation's capital and the appointment of Jeremy Smith-Roberts

Read Article



Recent articles

Recent articles

More articles

Collin Wang
Director


Iran conflict fuelling compounding risks for Australian insurers

The 2026 Iran conflict is reshaping the risk outlook for general insurers. Understanding and adapting to this will determine who thrives.

Read Article

Ramona Meyricke
Principal


When the heat is on: Where Australia’s workers face greatest risk

Extreme heat is increasing workplace injury risk across Australia. Our new index identifies regions where workers face heat-related risk.

Read Article