Archive | primary care RSS feed for this section

Resource re: means restriction in practice

I’ve had a nice response to the brief commentary I posted in conjunction with a link to the NY Times article about means restriction.  In light of that, I thought I’d post a link to the a site called Means Matter, which is published by the Harvard Injury Control Research Center.   The site has summary [...]

Read more

“Trusting” a person at risk who agrees to transport self

A colleague  forwarded me the following excellent question posted to a listserv: One question that has been raised is how to handle an individual who reports willingness to voluntarily go to the ER for psychiatric assessment.  Since trusting a questionably unstable and suicidal individual to present for treatment opens our agency and the patient up [...]

Read more

How we think about Primary Care “Gatekeepers”

Primary care physicians are often grouped in as “gatekeepers,” who need to be able to ask about suicide, know warning signs, and refer. The tend not to get in-depth training about formulating or documenting risk assessments. The problem with this “gatekeeper” view is that we don’t have the kind of seamless system that allows the [...]

Read more

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.