Literature DB >> 1459840

Clinicians' assessments of suicide risk: can self-report measures replace the experts?

Z Kaplan1, R Benbenishty, M Waysman, Z Solomon, A Bleich.   

Abstract

This study examined the possibility of using standardized self-report measures as "stand-ins" for clinicians' assessments of suicide risk. Subjects were 252 new applicants to a military mental health clinic who completed a battery of questionnaires and underwent clinical interviews. The self-report measures of psychiatric symptomatology (general and depression), personality (impulsivity, anger), and cognitions (hopelessness, attitudes toward life and death) were not highly correlated with clinicians' assessments of suicide risk and some showed a non-linear association. These findings suggest that the two methods of assessment are not interchangeable and that clinicians base their assessments of suicide risk, at least in part, on factors not assessed by the above questionnaires.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1459840

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Isr J Psychiatry Relat Sci        ISSN: 0333-7308            Impact factor:   0.481


  1 in total

1.  Pilot study: feasibility of using the Suicidal Ideation Questionnaire (SIQ) during acute suicidal crisis.

Authors:  Isabel Boege; Nicole Corpus; Renate Schepker; Joerg M Fegert
Journal:  Child Adolesc Psychiatry Ment Health       Date:  2014-11-04       Impact factor: 3.033

  1 in total

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