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Suicide risk assessment and management

Suicide risk assessment and management

Suicide risk assessment and management

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Risk Factors & Protective Factors - Danger Signals

  • Risk Factors:

    • 📌 SAD PERSONS scale: Sex (male), Age (>45), Depression, Previous attempt, Ethanol/substance use, Rational thinking loss, Social support lacking, Organized plan, No spouse, Sickness.
    • Hopelessness, access to lethal means, recent psychiatric discharge.
  • Protective Factors:

    • Strong therapeutic alliance
    • Family & social support
    • Reasons for living (e.g., children, future goals)
    • Problem-solving skills
  • ⚠️ Danger Signals (Immediate Hospitalization):

    • Specific plan with intent
    • Command hallucinations

⭐ A history of a previous suicide attempt is the strongest predictor of future suicide.

Clinical Assessment - The Suicide Inquiry

  • Direct Inquiry: Always ask directly and non-judgmentally about suicidal thoughts, plans, and intent. Normalizes the topic and is essential for safety.
  • Core Components: Assess severity and acuity.
    • Ideation: Passive (e.g., "wish I were dead") vs. Active (e.g., "thinking of killing myself").
    • Plan: Specificity, lethality, and preparedness.
    • Intent: Strength of desire to die; presence of ambivalence.
    • Access: Availability of lethal means.
  • Risk Stratification (📌 SAD PERSONS scale):
    • Sex (male), Age (<19/>45), Depression, Previous attempt, Ethanol/drug use, Rational thinking loss, Social support lacking, Organized plan, No spouse, Sickness.
    • Score >8 suggests high risk; consider hospitalization.

⭐ The single most important risk factor for suicide is a prior suicide attempt. This history dramatically increases the risk of future attempts and completion.

Management & Interventions - Safety Scaffolding

  • Core Principle: The level of intervention must match the level of acute risk.
  • Safety Planning (Moderate/High Risk):
    • Collaborative, written plan for managing future suicidal thoughts.
    • Includes coping strategies, social support contacts, and professional help numbers (e.g., 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline).
    • 📌 Means Restriction: Limiting access to lethal methods (firearms, medications) is a critical, evidence-based step.

Exam Favorite: Simply providing a patient with a crisis hotline number is insufficient for managing acute, high-risk suicidality; direct, active intervention like hospitalization is required.

High-Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • A prior suicide attempt is the strongest predictor of future risk.
  • Directly ask about suicidal ideation, intent, and plan; this is essential for assessment.
  • Hopelessness is the psychological state most strongly correlated with suicidal intent.
  • Immediate hospitalization is warranted for patients with a specific plan and intent.
  • SSRIs carry a black-box warning for ↑ suicidal thinking in individuals aged <25.
  • "No-suicide contracts" are not effective and no substitute for a thorough risk assessment.

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