Passive Suicidal Ideation: Still a High-Risk Clinical Scenario
2014; Frontline Medical Communications; Volume: 13; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
ISSN
1537-8276
Autores Tópico(s)Suicide and Self-Harm Studies
Resumo[FIGURE OMITTED] Thorough risk assessment may reveal active suicide The commonly held belief that passive suicidal poses less risk for suicide than active suicidal is steeped in the lore of psychiatric practice. suicidal ideation appears countless times in psychiatric records, articles, texts, guidelines, and clinical discourse. When a patient reports passive suicide ideation, the clinician may seize upon it as an indicator of low risk of suicide. The clinician may feel relieved and not perform a thorough suicide risk assessment. Whether suicide is active or passive, the goal is the same--terminating one's life. Suicidal ideation, such as the wish to die during sleep, to be killed in an accident, or to develop terminal cancer, may seem relatively innocuous, but it can be just as ominous as thoughts of hanging oneself. Although passive suicidal may allow time for interventions, passive can suddenly turn active. love my family too much to hurt myself Mr. F, a 52-year-old business executive, is brought to the hospital emergency room by his wife. His business is heading to bankruptcy and he is unable to go to the office and face his employees. Mr. F cannot sleep or eat, spending most of the day on the couch crying. His wife has threatened her husband with separation if he does not seek psychiatric treatment. Robert I. Simon, MD is Clinical Professor of Psychiatry, Georgetown University School of Medicine, Washington, DC, and Chairman, Department of Psychiatry, Suburban Hospital, a member of Johns Hopkins Medicine, Bethesda, Maryland. Disclosure Dr. Simon reports no financial relationships with any company whose products are mentioned in this article or with manufacturers of competing products. Adapted with permission from: Simon Rl: Preventing patient suicide: Clinical assessment and management. Arlington, VA: American Psychiatric Publishing, Inc.; 2011. Passive suicidal [FIGURE OMITTED] Clinical Point When a patient reports passive suicidal ideation, active suicidal invariably is present Mr. F tells the emergency room psychiatrist, am stressed but have no intention of hurting myself. I love my wife and kids too much to put them through that. He admits to having wishes to die during sleep, but reports, can't sleep anyway. His wife finds a loaded in the glove compartment of his car, but he says the gun is for my protection. He angrily denies any suicidal and protests, do not need to be here. His wife insists that he be treated, stating, will not take my husband home in his condition. Mr. F refuses psychiatric hospitalization but changes his mind when confronted with the alternative of involuntary hospitalization. He admits that, unknown to his wife, he recently purchased a $2 million life insurance policy and made funeral arrangements. He planned to kill himself with his revolver. A thorough suicide risk assessment reveals a number of evidence-based risk factors that place the patient at acute, high risk for suicide. Passive is active When a patient reports passive suicidal ideation, active suicidal invariably is present. No bright line separates them. Suicidal ideation, active or passive, contains a dynamic mix of ambivalent thoughts and feelings along a continuum of severity. It reflects ongoing change in the patient's psychiatric disorder.1 Reynolds et al2 assessed the clinical correlates of active suicidal vs passive death wishes in geriatric patients with recurrent major depression. Their data challenged the utility of distinguishing active and passive suicidal ideation. The authors also noted that the patient's can change from passive to active during an episode of illness. They recommended that clinicians be no less vigilant with patients expressing passive suicidal ideation. …
Referência(s)