Suicide and violence assessment in psychiatry |
Journal/Book: Gen Hosp Psychiat. 1996; 18: 655 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10010. Elsevier Science Inc. 416-421.
Abstract: Psychiatrists are increasingly expected to predict and prevent the suicidal and violent/homicidal impulses of their clients. This article reviews the current literature and research in these areas. While the debate continues on whether the clinician can successfully predict either violence or suicidal behavior in their patients, the preponderance of studies weighs in that predicting suicide and violence in the individual may not be possible currently given present knowledge. To compensate for forecasting limitations, conservation clinicians deliberately overpredict suicide or violence to help insure the safety of their patients and the greater communities in which they reside. In addition, clinicians need to perform thorough assessments and make logical clinical decisions that are in line with the perceived risks. Preventive measures for violence remain complex, but clinicians can maximize treatment effects by following specific intervention guidelines. Minimally, documentation concerning violence needs to fonts on the rationale for why treatment interventions were or were not implemented. The chart does not require lengthy notations but should include a reasonable assessment of risk and the delineation of a prudent course af action.
Note: Article DH Hughes, Cambridge Hosp, Dept Psychiat, Psychiat Emergency Serv, 1439 Cambridge St, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
Keyword(s): EMERGENCY ROOM; PREVENTION; RISPERIDONE; PREDICTION; INPATIENTS; BEHAVIOR; RISK
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