Suicide prevention contract

A suicide prevention contract is a contract that contains an agreement not to commit suicide. It is often used by medical professionals dealing with depressive clients.[1] Typically, the client will be asked to agree to talk with the professional prior to carrying out any decision to commit suicide. Suicide prevention contracts have been described as a "widely used but overvalued clinical and risk-management technique."[2] Indeed, it has been argued that such contracts "may in fact increase danger by providing psychiatrists with a false sense of security, thus decreasing their clinical vigilance."[3] It has also been argued that such contracts can anger or inhibit the client and introduce coercion into therapy.[4]

See also

References

  1. The suicide prevention contract: clinical, legal, and risk management issues, J Am Acad Psychiatry Law, 1999, pp. 445–450
  2. MC Miller, DG Jacobs (1998), Talisman or Taboo: The Controversy of the Suicide-Prevention Contract, Harvard Review of Psychiatry
  3. The "Suicide-Prevention Contract": A Dangerous Myth 38 (14), Psychiatric News, July 18, 2003, p. 3
  4. LM Range, C Campbell, SH Kovac (2002), No-suicide contracts: An overview and recommendations