"It is not trivial to be on suicide watch at all ... that just made the whole thing even less palatable to me.
"I am very surprised that they were given that level of responsibility."
Life Matters Suicide Prevention Trust founder Corinda Taylor said having student nurses doing a suicide watch was not ideal, but it was better than not having anyone watching a vulnerable patient at all.
"As long as somebody is watching the person it's better than nobody watching the person," Taylor said.
"But was the student nurse given proper training? That's what should be asked."
A qualified professional doing a suicide watch was trained to spot verbal or body language clues about how the person was, Taylor said.
"I don't know the circumstances of this case but I would always advocate for good training, especially when it comes to something that could mean life or death."
Little also advised that 21 student nurses from Otago Polytechnic School of Nursing were called on to work on July 23-24 to help provide patient watch work at Dunedin Hospital.
"No other districts have recently reported doing this."
The students were called upon in such a scramble that HNZS was unable to register them on its payroll.
HNZS recompensed the students with $200 grocery vouchers rather than pay them.
Dr Reti questioned why students were being asked to work in this way, and when the Government decided to pay people in vouchers for a day's work.
The New Zealand Nurses' Organisation strongly condemned HNZS for calling in the student nurses, saying the trainees had been placed at unacceptable risk, that they had little idea what the watch work involved, and that most were unlikely to have been in a hospital ward before.
One of the young nurses was reprimanded for a social media post in which she chronicled events on her shift, which included being struck by a patient and nearly being brought to tears several times.