| Case histories.‘If you had not called me when I was on the bridge that night …’ said Patient B, a young medical specialist. It was 1:00 a.m. on Easter Sunday morning this year when one of the authors (D.H.) found a suicide email (to be read next day presumably) from this young doctor he had been asked to treat. She had been suffering depression for about 15 years and made several determined suicide attempts during this time. She had been given all the appropriate care from the two psychiatrists and the psychologist diligently treating her. What turned the clinical scenario from suicide off a freeway bridge (with notes of apology and explanation to various people left behind) into scores of 0–2 out of 10 on self-ratings of suicidality, anxiety and depression 2 months later was not only just rapidly changing combinations of drugs but also the therapeutic emphasis that ‘You Are Not Alone’, the theme of www.youthsuicide.com. Implementing this strategy, D.H. initiated text and/or telephone video contact twice a day, 7 days a week, because financial factors prevented the patient travelling interstate to a standard consultation.Mental health professionals are aware of the pivotal factors driving suicide, particularly hopelessness, access to means (including information on how to suicide) and a sense of being a burden on other people, or even alienating other people, exacerbated by insomnia. This patient, who happened to be a doctor, emphasised that another significant risk factor was the depressive belief, ‘You are not worth it’. Insistence on twice daily contact, 7 days a week, demonstrably challenged this belief and diminished this lethal component of her suicidal drive.Patients C and D are young women, each with a history of multiple admissions and suicide attempts being managed by multiple psychiatrists. Indeed, patient D had seen 30 psychiatrists and had a 6-month admission before being referred to D.H. Patient E has a history of years of severe depression and suicidal ideas, unresponsive to a vast range of treatments by multiple psychiatrists. She is adamant she resists suicide only because of the daily contact with her psychiatrist. Patient F is a psychiatrist who used to be bedridden due to depression for 3 months a year. The recovered patients went back to normal lives after some months of daily therapy, together with combinations of antidepressants and supplements.Patients receiving daily therapy by video call or in person are better equipped to refute depressive beliefs as they perceive and recognise the effort and concern of the mental health therapist(s) treating them. If such calls need to be made out of normal business hours, or late at night in distress, and also with calls being made at weekends and on holidays, this demonstrable care sends a powerful message to patients that they are indeed ‘worth it’. |