February 17, 2022

Assessing imminent suicide risk: What about future planning?

Drs. Shobassy and Subhi Abu-Mohammad publish paper in Current Psychiatry

Ahmad Shobassy, M.D.and Ahmad Subhi Abu-Mohammad, M.D., recently published a paper in Current Psychiatry, that was primarily written based on observations in Psychiatric Emergency Services (PES): Assessing imminent suicide risk: What about future planning? 

Assessment of the imminent risk of suicide is complicated and not well researched. A patient’s future planning can be used to better inform the evaluation. A patient may have a limited ability to generate future plans while contemplating suicide. Future plans that are specific, rich in details, achievable, dedicated to addressing the near future, and expressed smoothly and in a noncalculated fashion may be more reliable than other types of plans.

The process of future plan­ning may indicate low imminent suicide risk when it leads the patient to generate new plans to address current circumstances or the near future. When evaluating a patient’s imminent suicide risk, clinicians should con­sider abandoning a binary “is there future planning or not” approach and adopting a more complex, nuanced understanding to appropriately utilize this important factor in the risk assessment.