Suicide risk assessment

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Quick Overview

Suicide risk assessment is a critical clinical skill requiring structured biopsychosocial evaluation rather than reliance on prediction tools. NICE NG225 emphasizes comprehensive assessment of risk factors, protective factors, and immediate safety planning. Proper documentation and recognition of high-risk indicators determine appropriate management pathways and urgency of psychiatric referral.

Core Facts & Concepts

High-Risk Indicators (Immediate Action Required)

  • Previous suicide attempts - single strongest predictor (40× increased risk)
  • Detailed suicide plan - method, location, timing specified
  • Access to lethal means - medications stockpiled, weapons accessible
  • Severe hopelessness - belief that situation cannot improve
  • Recent significant loss - bereavement, relationship breakdown, job loss within 3 months
  • Psychotic symptoms - especially command hallucinations
  • Severe depression with psychomotor agitation/insomnia

Figure 1: Clinical photograph showing ligature marks on neck from previous suicide attempt

Protective Factors to Document

  • Responsibility for dependents (children, elderly parents)
  • Strong therapeutic alliance or social support
  • Religious/cultural beliefs against suicide
  • Future-oriented thinking and plans
  • Engagement with treatment

⚠️ What NOT to Use

⚠️ Warning: NICE NG225 explicitly advises AGAINST using risk assessment scales/tools (SAD PERSONS, Beck Scale) as sole decision-making instruments - they have poor predictive value and may provide false reassurance.

Documentation Requirements

  • Biopsychosocial formulation completed
  • Specific risk factors and protective factors listed
  • Patient's own words about suicidal ideation recorded
  • Safety plan agreed and documented
  • Follow-up arrangements confirmed within 48 hours for high-risk patients

Problem-Solving Approach

Structured Assessment Framework (NICE NG225)

  1. Establish rapport and safety - private environment, non-judgmental approach
  2. Ask directly about suicidal thoughts - "Are you having thoughts of ending your life?"
  3. Assess intent and planning
    • Passive ideation vs active planning
    • Specificity of method, location, timing
    • Preparatory acts (writing notes, stockpiling medications)
  4. Explore precipitants - recent stressors, losses, relationship breakdowns
  5. Mental state examination - mood, psychosis, agitation, hopelessness
  6. Past psychiatric history - previous attempts (method, lethality, outcome), admissions
  7. Substance use - alcohol/drug intoxication increases impulsivity
  8. Social circumstances - isolation, homelessness, unemployment
  9. Physical health - chronic pain, terminal illness

Figure 2: Mental state examination showing flat affect and psychomotor retardation in severe depression

🚩 Red Flags Requiring Urgent Psychiatric Assessment

  • Detailed suicide plan with high lethality method
  • Recent suicide attempt within 48 hours
  • Command hallucinations to self-harm
  • Severe agitation with intent to leave immediately
  • Lack of protective factors
  • Refusal to engage with safety planning

Analysis Framework

Thresholds for Psychiatric Referral

UrgencyClinical FeaturesActionTimeframe
EmergencyActive plan + intent to act imminently; recent high-lethality attempt; command hallucinationsPsychiatric liaison/crisis teamSame day
UrgentSignificant ideation + plan but no immediate intent; severe hopelessness; poor protective factorsCommunity mental health team referralWithin 24-48h
RoutinePassive ideation; good engagement; strong protective factorsGP follow-up + safety planWithin 1 week

Discriminating Features: Passive vs Active Suicidal Ideation

FeaturePassive IdeationActive Ideation
Intent"Wish I was dead""I plan to kill myself"
PlanNo specific methodDetailed method, timing, location
Preparatory actsNoneNotes written, means acquired
UrgencyLower riskHigher risk - requires immediate action

Visual Aid

Safety Planning Components

  • Warning signs patient can recognize
  • Internal coping strategies (distraction, relaxation)
  • Social contacts for support
  • Crisis helpline numbers (Samaritans: 116 123)
  • Restricting access to lethal means
  • Follow-up appointment confirmed

Key Points Summary

Ask directly - "Are you thinking of ending your life?" improves disclosure and does NOT increase risk

Previous attempts are the strongest predictor (40× risk) - always document method, lethality, outcome

Do NOT use risk scales (SAD PERSONS, Beck) as sole decision tools - NICE NG225 advises against due to poor predictive value

High-risk triad - detailed plan + access to means + severe hopelessness = emergency psychiatric referral same day

Document protective factors - responsibility for dependents, social support, future plans reduce immediate risk

Safety planning mandatory - restrict lethal means, crisis contacts, follow-up within 48h for high-risk patients

Thresholds: Emergency (same day), Urgent (24-48h), Routine (1 week) based on intent, plan, and protective factors

Practice Questions: Suicide risk assessment

Test your understanding with these related questions

A 27-year-old woman presents with amenorrhea, weight loss, and excessive exercise. Her BMI is 16 kg/m². She has bradycardia and hypotension. What is the most serious immediate risk?

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Flashcards: Suicide risk assessment

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Consider _____ if an drug dependent parent is responsible for a child/children

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

Consider _____ if an drug dependent parent is responsible for a child/children

safeguarding

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