SYSTEMS OF CARE FOR PATIENTS AT RISK FOR SUICIDE
A system of care is a set of interventions that can be consistently carried out in various settings to ensure that people get the right care, at the right time, by the right provider or team, and in the right place. Newer models of care for management of patients at risk for suicide include:
- Crisis support and follow-up (e.g., center hotline)
- Brief intervention and follow-up
- Suicide-specific outpatient management
- Emergency respite care
- Tele–mental health
- Inpatient psychiatric hospitalization, with suicide-specific treatment
(EDC, 2022)
Crisis Support and Follow-Up
Crisis support and follow-up can include mobile crisis teams, walk-in crisis clinics, hospital-based psychiatric emergency services, peer-based crisis services, and other programs designed to provide assessment, crisis stabilization, and referral to an appropriate level of ongoing care. Crisis centers can also serve as a connection to the patient between outpatient visits and are helpful for patients with barriers to accessing outpatient mental health services. Crisis services also include care coordination. Mobile crisis teams provide care in the community at the location of the person who considering suicide (EDC, 2022).
Brief Intervention and Follow-Up
Brief interventions range from a single, in-person session, to a computer-administered intervention in a primary care office, to an online screening and feedback intervention that can be done on a personal electronic device. Brief interventions can be an immediate intervention and also can be used in conjunction with any other level of care. Safety planning is recommended for those who refuse outpatient care. Outreach and follow-up are provided through phone calls, letters, and texts (EDC, 2022).
Suicide-Specific Outpatient Management
Suicide-specific outpatient management involves several sessions that may include dialectical behavior therapy, cognitive therapy for suicide prevention (CT-SP), and collaborative assessment and management of suicide (CAMS). It is critical that outpatient mental health providers monitor patients between appointments and follow up when patients miss appointments (EDC, 2022).
Emergency Respite Care
Emergency respite care is an alternative to inpatient or emergency department services for a person in a suicidal crisis when the person is not in immediate danger. Respite centers are usually located in residential facilities designed to be more like a home than a hospital. These facilities may include staff members who are peers who have lived experience of suicide. Respite care is increasingly being utilized as an intervention and may include help with establishing continuity of care and provision of longer-term support resources, as well as support by text, phone, or online following a stay (EDC, 2022).
Tele–Mental Health
Tele–mental health involves electronic communication to provide clinical mental health services from a distance. Healthcare organizations can use these services to provide emergency assessments and treatment, especially for those patients located in remote geographic regions and for organizations with limited access to mental health resources (EDC, 2022).
Hospitalization
Inpatient hospitalization is the most restrictive option for addressing suicide risk. Research has found that patients may be at higher risk immediately after discharge from inpatient care. The reasons why this may happen are not known; however, experts have questions as to whether there is something about the experience of hospitalization itself that may be harmful. Involuntary hospitalization has been found to be associated with increased risk of suicide both during the hospitalization and afterward. It is therefore recommended that hospitalization be carefully weighed against other options (EDC, 2022).
INVOLUNTARY HOSPITALIZATION
Involuntary hospitalization (or commitment) means placing a person in a psychiatric hospital or unit without their consent. The laws governing involuntary hospitalization vary from state to state, but in general, they confine involuntary commitment to persons who are mentally ill and/or under the influence of drugs or alcohol and are deemed to be in imminent danger of harming themselves or others
According to Kentucky Stat. Ann. § 202A.026 statue 202A.026 no person shall be involuntary hospitalized unless such person is a mentally ill person:
- Who presents a danger or threat of danger to self, family, or others as a result of the mental illness
- Who can reasonably benefit from treatment; and
- For whom hospitalization is the least restrictive alternative mode of treatment presently available
(Treatment Advocacy Center, 2023)
SUICIDE SAFETY PLAN
Safety planning is a clinical process involving listening, empathizing with, and engaging the patient in the development of a series of action steps to be taken in the event the patient experiences suicide ideation, arranged in order of increasing response intensity. A safety plan also includes a collaboratively written list of coping strategies and sources of support the patient can use before or during a suicidal crisis. The plan is brief, written in the patient’s own words, easy to read, and involves the following steps:
- Warning signs or triggers (thoughts, images, mood, situation, behavior) that a crisis may be developing
- Internal coping strategies for diversion (relaxation technique, physical activity) without contacting another person
- People and social settings that provide distraction
- People whom the patient can ask for help when in crisis
- Professionals or agencies the patient can contact during a crisis
- Making the environment safe, including lethal means removal
- Optional step identifying reasons for living
When introducing the suicide safety plan process, the clinician takes these steps:
- Informs the patient that the purpose of the plan is to help them recognize when a crisis may escalate so that they know to refer to their plan and take action to reduce risk
- Helps the individual identify strategies that are simple and easy to use
- Obtains feedback from the patient about the likelihood of using the strategies
- Identifies barriers and problem-solves ways to overcome them
After the plan has been developed, the clinician does the following:
- Assesses the likelihood that the overall safety plan will be used
- Discusses where the safety plan will be kept and how it will be located during a crisis
- Reviews the plan periodically when the patient’s circumstances or needs change
(Stanley, 2021; Hindman & Fleming, 2022)