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Journal Article

Citation

Lotito M, Cook E. Ment. Health Clin. 2015; 5(5): 216-223.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, College of Psychiatric and Neurologic Pharmacists)

DOI

10.9740/mhc.2015.09.216

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Conducting an accurate suicide risk assessment (SRA) is no simple task as there are a number of factors that influence an individual's level of suicidality and his/her willingness to share this information. Therefore, it is imperative that practitioners adopt a systematic approach to conducting and documenting the foreseeability that a patient will commit suicide.

METHODS: PubMed was used to search for articles published in MEDLINE journals using the following keywords: suicide, risk assessment, measure, scale. Randomized trials and pilot, proof-of-concept publications investigating the use of specific SRA measurements were included in the review. The scales are described based on the prevailing opinions in psychiatry from the American Psychiatric Association's Textbook of Suicide Assessment and Management (2nd ed., 2012).

RESULTS: Although various SRA scales exist, experts in the field have repeatedly concluded that there is not any one scale that can predict who will commit suicide to any useful degree. However, when used along with the clinical interview, standardized suicide risk factor components of clinical and research scales remain crucial to gaining information often omitted by patients regarding thoughts and preparation for suicide. A summary of the most widely cited scales and approaches used in SRA is provided.

DISCUSSION: SRA remains a challenge largely due to the fact that suicidal behavior is multifactorial. As a result, risk formulation is a process that should involve both standardized measures and detailed clinical interviews repeated over time. © 2015 CPNP


Language: en

Keywords

suicide; risk assessment; scale; measure

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