When a patient has a positive screen for increased risk for suicide, the next step is to conduct a comprehensive risk assessment.
This may be conducted by the person who does the screening, or by a different healthcare professional.
There is a very clear clinician rating form that includes the SAFE-T combined with the Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale. Visit the link below and click on “SAFE-T with C-SSRS Lifetime and Recent” to download. This form walks the clinician through all parts of a risk assessment.
Learn More >>
Based on these three areas of inquiry, the clinician then makes an assessment of the level of risk and a disposition plan based on that level of risk. The clinician then documents their assessment and determination of risk level. They may also include treatment options they considered and chose not to recommend, along with a rationale for why they made the choices they did.
There are online trainings for healthcare professionals who want to learn more about conducting suicide risk assessments.
Copyright © 2024 Care New England Health System