Article

Ambiguity Uncertainty and Risk: Reframing the task of suicide risk assessment and prevention in acute in-patient mental health

Details

Citation

Paterson B, Cassels C, Graham A, Dowding D & McComish A (2007) Ambiguity Uncertainty and Risk: Reframing the task of suicide risk assessment and prevention in acute in-patient mental health. Irish Nurse, 8 (2), pp. 22-25. http://www.scottishirishhealthcare.com/index.cgi?in_archive

Abstract
The work of the National Confidential Inquiry into Suicide by People with Mental Illness has served to draw attention to the issue of suicide amongst users of mental health services including inpatient and provided the basis for a series of recommendations aimed at improving practice (Appleby et al., 2001, NIMHE 2003). Such recommendations include further training on risk assessment for practitioners. However, representing the problem of suicide as one which can be 'managed' by risk assessment particularly quantitative actuarial approaches implicitly misrepresents the phenomena of suicidality as something which can predicted and therefore managed may be inherently unpredictable at the level of the individual over the short term. We need instead to acknowledge that our work with service users who may be contemplating suicide embraces and acknowledges both uncertainty and ambiguity and seeks to assess risk phenomenologically at the level of the individual such that by understanding their reasons for living and dying we can work in partnership with them to find hope.

Keywords
Suicide; Risk Assessment; Phenomenology; Uncertainty; Mental health policy; Suicide

Journal
Irish Nurse: Volume 8, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date31/01/2007
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/3069
PublisherGlobal Media & Exhibitions Ltd / Strathayr Publishing
Publisher URLhttp://www.scottishirishhealthcare.com/index.cgi?in_archive
ISSN1463-3817