forensic
forencis
suicide
100

What is threat assessment

a process that evaluates the credibility and seriousness of a potential threat, focusing on preventing violence before it occurs

100

Why are these assessments important

- help prevent violence and harm

- inform safety planning and decision-making

- provide early intervention and support

- enhance community safety and preparedness

100

areas to evaluate suicide assessment

psychiatric illnnesses, history, individual strengths, psychoocil situation, suicidality and symptoms 

200

What is risk assessment

a process that evaluates the potential impact and likelihood of a threat occurring in a particular environment

purpose: identifying vulnerabilities and helping develop strategies to mitigate risk

200

Why is suicide risk hard to predict

- low base rate event- statistically rare, even among high- risk populations 

- many people with risk factors do not die by suicide, making prediction difficult

- risk factors are nonspecific and common among large populations

200

Suicide Risk factors

demographic, psychosocial, physical illness, behavioral dimesons, cognitive dimensions, childhood trauma, genetic and familial 

300

Similarities between the above 2

- both aim to prevent harm

- requires gathering relevant information

- use systematic methods for evaluations

- involve collaboration among professionals 

300

Challenges in suicid prediction

false positives: identifying someone as high risk when they won't act

false negatives: missing someone who does go on to attempt or die by suicide

risk assessments often result in over-prediction to err on the side of caution

300

protective factors

children or family in home

pregnancy 

deterrent religious beliefs

life satisfaction

reality testing ability 

positive coping skills

positive social support

positive therapeutic relationship

400

Differences between the 2

focus: 

TA- specific person or group

RA- environment or system

Goal:

TA- assess intent and capability to cause harm

RA- evaluate vulnerabilities and consequences

Application:

TA- schools, workplaces, individuals

RA- public safety, cybersecurity, emergency plans

400

Why still conduct suicide risk assessments

- helps identify people who need support and intervention

- can guide treatment planning and resource allocation

- better safe than sorry-even imperfect assessments can reduce harm

400
High risk groups

prior suicide attemptor

bipolar disorder

major depression

mixed drug abuse

personality disorder

alcohol abuse, cancer, chronic pain syndrome



500

Examples

Threat assessment- a student writing violent threats in a journal 

Risk Assessment- evaluating the layout of a school for safety vulnerabilities(unlocked doors, lack of surveillance cameras)

500

Individual contributing factors


neurobiology

impulsiveness

hopelessness

family history 

life stressors

suicidal behavior

personality disorder/traits

substance use/abuse

severe medical illness

500

High risk profile

previous suicide attempts

significant depressive symptoms-hopelessness

male gender

first decade of illness

current substance abuse, poor current work and social functioning

recent hospital discharge

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