This model of suicide assessment emphasizes racism, community violence, and economic hardship as core components of risk.
What is the ecological or multisystemic model?
This type of support system—natural, informal, and community‑based—is the first line of response in crisis intervention.
What are natural support systems?
This group of clients is most likely to experience increased danger—not safety—when police are involved in crisis response.
Who are Black, Indigenous, TGNB, undocumented, or otherwise criminalized clients?
Flynn emphasizes this type of inquiry—curious, nonjudgmental, and direct—as essential for suicide assessment.
What is nonjudgmental inquiry?
TGNB BIPOC clients often rely on this type of care—collective, relational, and community‑based—to survive suicidality.
What is community care or collective care?
This term describes culturally normative coping strategies that may look “avoidant” but are actually adaptive responses to oppression.
What is non‑pathologizing cultural coping?
This ethical tension arises when clinicians must follow mandated reporting laws while working with families historically harmed by institutions.
What is balancing safety protocols with cultural and historical mistrust?
This approach to safety planning centers community care, autonomy, and non‑carceral resources.
What is abolitionist‑informed safety planning?
This collaborative tool helps clients identify steps to stay safe during suicidal crises.
What is a collaborative safety plan?
This clinical mistake occurs when therapists appropriate or dilute community‑derived resilience practices.
What is co‑opting cultural wisdom?
Boyd‑Franklin et al. argue that this type of questioning—direct, clear, and non‑euphemistic—is essential for accurate suicide assessment.
What is asking explicit questions about suicidal intent, plan, and means?
Boyd‑Franklin et al. emphasize that crisis intervention must be adapted for communities disproportionately affected by this systemic issue.
What is structural inequity or systemic violence?
This clinical assumption—that police are neutral or protective—is challenged by Drustrup et al.
What is the assumption of police as default safety responders?
Clinicians must adapt suicide assessment to account for these culturally specific ways of expressing distress.
What are cultural idioms of distress?
This protective factor—central to TGNB BIPOC survival—includes joy, identity affirmation, and resistance.
What is culturally specific resilience?
This protective factor is often overlooked in traditional assessments but is central in Black families’ responses to crisis.
What is extended kin and community support?
This crisis response mistake occurs when clinicians rely too heavily on institutional systems like police or CPS.
What is overreliance on institutional intervention?
This ethical practice requires clinicians to discuss the risks of police involvement openly with clients.
What is informed consent about emergency responses?
Flynn’s approach requires clinicians to understand this—the client’s personal meaning of suicidality.
What is the client’s narrative about suicidal thoughts?
Clinicians must center this in treatment rather than focusing solely on pathology.
What is TGNB BIPOC resilience and identity affirmation?
This clinical mistake occurs when practitioners interpret culturally grounded survival strategies as symptoms of pathology.
What is cultural misdiagnosis or over‑pathologizing?
This culturally grounded approach requires clinicians to mobilize community leaders, faith networks, and kin systems during crisis.
What is community‑based crisis intervention?
This tension arises when clinicians work in settings where police involvement is “standard procedure.”
What is practicing abolitionist ethics within carceral institutional constraints?
This adaptation helps clinicians support clients whose cultural communities hold different meanings around suicide.
What is culturally responsive assessment?
This practice involves partnering with TGNB BIPOC‑led organizations without overshadowing or professionalizing their work.
What is collaborative, community‑rooted clinical practice?