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Risk Assessment

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Risk Assessment Basics - Risk Rundown 101

  • Definition: Evaluating an individual's likelihood of adverse outcomes, such as harm to self or others.
  • Purpose: To inform clinical decisions, guide interventions, and ensure safety for the patient and community.
  • Importance: Crucial for patient and public safety, fulfilling legal/ethical obligations, and guiding treatment.
  • General Principles:
    • Dynamic: Ongoing; re-evaluated as status/circumstances change.
    • Collaborative: Involves patient, family (if appropriate), and team.
    • Comprehensive: Considers static/dynamic risk and protective factors.

⭐ Risk assessment is an ongoing, dynamic process, not a one-time event.

Suicide Risk Assessment - Suicide Signals Sleuth

Assessing suicide risk involves identifying modifiable (dynamic) and non-modifiable (static) factors, alongside protective elements and immediate warning signs.

Risk FactorsProtective Factors
Static:- Strong social support
- Previous suicide attempt(s)- Effective coping skills
- Family history of suicide- Sense of responsibility
- Chronic psychiatric illness- Positive therapeutic alliance
Dynamic:- Hope for the future
- Active psychiatric symptoms- Access to mental health care
- Substance abuse
- Hopelessness, anhedonia
- Impulsivity, agitation
- Access to lethal means
- Recent stressors (loss, shame)
  • Ideation: suicidal thoughts/plans
  • Substance abuse: ↑ or new use
  • Purposelessness: no reason to live
  • Anxiety, agitation, insomnia
  • Trapped: feeling no way out
  • Hopelessness
  • Withdrawal: from friends, family
  • Anger: rage, seeking revenge
  • Recklessness: risky behaviors
  • Mood changes: dramatic shifts

📌 SAD PERSONS Scale: (Score interpretation varies; e.g., 0-4 low risk, 5-6 medium, ≥7 high risk)

Warning Signs of Suicide

⭐ Presence of a clear suicide plan with access to lethal means indicates very high acute risk and often warrants immediate intervention, potentially including hospitalization.

Violence Risk Assessment - Violence Vibes Check

⭐ Past history of violence is the single best predictor of future violence.

Risk Factors:

Static (Historical, Unchangeable)Dynamic (Modifiable, Current State)
* Past violence (frequency, severity)* Substance use (esp. alcohol, stimulants)
* Male gender; Young age at 1st offense* Active psychosis (command hallucinations, paranoia)
* Antisocial Personality Disorder/Traits* Impulsivity; Poor anger control
* History of childhood abuse/neglect* Non-adherence to treatment/medication
* Early maladjustment (school)* Access to weapons; Acute stressors
  • Agitation, pacing, motor restlessness
  • Overt threats (verbal, written, physical)
  • Intense, labile anger; hostility, clenched fists
  • Suspiciousness, paranoid ideation, feeling persecuted

Risk Management Interventions - Safety Net Blueprint

  • Immediate Actions (Acute Risk):
    • Prioritize Safety: Secure environment for patient & staff.
    • Employ verbal & non-verbal De-escalation techniques.
    • Consider Hospitalization: Voluntary or involuntary, based on severity and available support.
    • Remove Means: Restrict access to potential methods of harm.
  • Short-Term Management (Post-Crisis):
    • Develop collaborative Safety Plan: Patient-centered, identifies triggers, coping strategies, support contacts.
    • Implement Frequent Monitoring: Intensity based on risk; regular follow-ups.
    • Engage support systems: Family, friends, carers for observation and support.
  • Long-Term Interventions (Recovery-Oriented):
    • Treat Underlying Disorder: Comprehensive psychiatric care including pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy.
    • Provide ongoing Psychosocial Support: Therapy, rehabilitation, housing, vocational aid.
    • Manage comorbidities, especially substance use disorders.

⭐ The principle of least restrictive environment should guide all interventions.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Risk assessment focuses on suicide, violence, self-neglect, & absconding.
  • Distinguish static (e.g., past attempts) vs. dynamic (e.g., active symptoms, substance use) risk factors.
  • Protective factors like social support and coping skills reduce overall risk.
  • Meticulous documentation of risk assessment and safety plans is crucial.
  • Clinical judgment is paramount; tools like SAD PERSONS are supplementary.
  • Breach confidentiality only for imminent, serious threats to self or others.
  • Key interventions: safety planning, treating underlying disorders, restricting lethal means.

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