Litschi Melissa A, Lancaster Steven L, Linkh David J, Lafferty Megan
Cohen Veterans Network, Institute for Quality, Stamford, CT, USA.
Center to Improve Veteran Involvement in Care (CIVIC), VA Portland Health Care System, Portland, OR, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2025 May 28. doi: 10.1007/s11606-025-09570-y.
More than half of people experiencing suicidal thoughts and behaviors may never disclose their experiences to another person. Veterans are more likely to die by suicide than their civilian counterparts and report barriers to disclosure of suicidal thoughts and behaviors during screenings. While studies of veteran and service member perspectives offer recommendations to facilitate disclosure, little is known about clinician perspectives and strategies.
Describe clinician perspectives on non-disclosure among military-affiliated clients and strategies to address potential non-disclosure in this at-risk population.
Qualitative analysis of transcript summaries from semi-structured interviews.
Seventeen clinicians serving military and veteran clients participated. Professional backgrounds and credentials were diverse, with 71% having 5 or more years of clinical experience. Roughly half of the participants treated clients with suicidal ideation three or more times per week.
Interviews focused on clinicians' approaches and decision-making processes during suicide risk stratification and treatment planning, including barriers and facilitators. This paper focuses on identified challenges of non-disclosure. Transcripts were analyzed using rapid qualitative analysis.
Clinicians described their experiences with non-disclosure of suicidal ideation among military-affiliated clients, including perspectives on disclosure barriers and communication strategies used to facilitate disclosure. When discussing the challenge of non-disclosure clinicians reported (1) experiencing guardedness and non-disclosure among their clients, and (2) perceiving stigma and fear of negative consequences as disclosure barriers. Based on these experiences, clinicians modified their approaches to suicide risk assessment to facilitate disclosure by (1) normalizing suicidal thoughts and behaviors as safe topics, (2) educating clients to address fears, (3) collaborating with clients to promote acceptance of safe firearm storage, and (4) deliberately using standardized measures to overcome disclosure challenges.
Proactively implementing communication strategies that address perceived barriers to disclosure of suicidal thoughts and behaviors among military-affiliated psychotherapy clients may facilitate disclosure.
超过半数有自杀想法和行为的人可能从未向他人透露过自己的经历。退伍军人自杀的可能性比普通民众更高,且他们表示在筛查过程中存在透露自杀想法和行为的障碍。虽然对退伍军人和现役军人观点的研究提出了促进透露的建议,但对于临床医生的观点和策略却知之甚少。
描述临床医生对与军事相关客户中不透露自杀想法和行为的看法,以及针对这一高危人群潜在不透露情况的应对策略。
对半结构化访谈的文字记录摘要进行定性分析。
17名服务于军事人员和退伍军人客户的临床医生参与其中。专业背景和资质各不相同,71%的人有5年或以上临床经验。大约一半的参与者每周为有自杀意念的客户提供三次或更多次治疗。
访谈聚焦于临床医生在自杀风险分层和治疗计划过程中的方法和决策过程,包括障碍和促进因素。本文重点关注已确定的不透露情况的挑战。使用快速定性分析方法对文字记录进行分析。
临床医生描述了他们在与军事相关客户中遇到的不透露自杀意念的经历,包括对透露障碍的看法以及用于促进透露的沟通策略。在讨论不透露情况的挑战时,临床医生报告称:(1)客户存在戒备心理且不透露信息;(2)将耻辱感和对负面后果的恐惧视为透露障碍。基于这些经历,临床医生调整了他们的自杀风险评估方法,以促进透露,方法包括:(1)将自杀想法和行为正常化为安全话题;(2)教育客户克服恐惧;(3)与客户合作以促进接受安全的枪支储存;(4)有意使用标准化措施来克服透露挑战。
积极实施沟通策略,解决军事相关心理治疗客户中被认为存在的自杀想法和行为透露障碍,可能会促进透露。