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Journal Article

Citation

Staal MA. Mil. Med. 2001; 166(3): 195-198.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2001, Association of Military Surgeons of the United States)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

11263015

Abstract

Professional practice standards and ethical obligations in the realm of suicide and risk management have been discussed for the last several decades. In the civilian sector, this discussion has taken the form of malpractice case law, the development of numerous assessment tools and practice guidelines for clinicians, and some attempts to describe possible models of prevention. In the Air Force, concern regarding suicide and risk management has evolved into a formalized program of community awareness and education that has been testing the boundaries of suicidal risk detection, assessment, and support facilitation. This article briefly describes this program, its success, and its implications for both active duty and civilian populations. Guidelines for mental health practice standards in risk management and suicide assessment are also discussed.


Language: en

Keywords

Aerospace Medicine; Community-Institutional Relations; Forecasting; Health Education; Humans; Military Personnel; Models, Organizational; Practice Guidelines as Topic; Primary Prevention; Professional Competence; Program Evaluation; Risk Assessment; Risk Factors; Risk Management; Suicide; Suicide Prevention; United States

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