Applies Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale and structured risk assessment frameworks. Use when assessing suicide risk, documenting safety evaluations, or creating safety plans.
Applies the Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS) and structured risk assessment frameworks for suicide risk documentation and safety planning.
Suicide is the 11th leading cause of death in the United States, with over 49,000 deaths annually. The Joint Commission's National Patient Safety Goal NPSG.15.01.01 requires behavioral health organizations to use validated, evidence-based tools to assess suicide risk. The APA Practice Guidelines for Assessment and Treatment of Patients with Suicidal Behaviors mandate structured risk assessments that go beyond clinical impression. Failure to conduct and document an adequate suicide risk assessment is the single most common basis for successful malpractice litigation in psychiatry.
The Zero Suicide framework (endorsed by SAMHSA, NIMH, and the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention) establishes that every patient encounter in a behavioral health setting should include standardized suicide screening, with escalation to full risk assessment when screens are positive. Documentation must capture the clinical reasoning linking identified risk factors, protective factors, and the resulting risk-level determination to the chosen intervention and disposition.
Begin with a validated screening instrument. The Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS) Screener includes two categories of questions:
Suicidal Ideation Questions (past month):
Suicidal Behavior (lifetime and past 3 months):
Any "yes" response to Questions 1-2 requires further assessment. Any "yes" to Questions 3-5 or suicidal behavior requires immediate full risk evaluation and safety intervention.
Systematically evaluate and document each category:
Document protective factors with the same rigor as risk factors:
Integrate all data into a risk-level determination. Document the clinical reasoning explicitly:
Low Risk: Modifiable risk factors present but manageable, strong protective factors, no current ideation or passive ideation only, engaged in treatment, no access to lethal means. Disposition: outpatient management with safety plan.
Moderate Risk: Active ideation without specific plan or intent, multiple risk factors, some protective factors, ambivalence about living. Disposition: intensified outpatient treatment (increased session frequency, medication adjustment), safety plan with means restriction, close follow-up within 48-72 hours.
High Risk: Active ideation with plan or intent, few protective factors, recent attempt, access to lethal means, acute agitation or intoxication, psychotic symptoms. Disposition: emergency psychiatric evaluation, consider voluntary or involuntary hospitalization.
Imminent Risk: Active ideation with plan, intent, and available means; preparatory behaviors; patient unable to contract for safety. Disposition: immediate psychiatric hospitalization, continuous observation, involuntary hold if patient refuses voluntary admission.
For all patients at any risk level above none, create or update a Safety Plan using the Stanley-Brown Safety Planning Intervention:
Document the safety plan in the medical record. Provide the patient with a written or digital copy. Identify a collateral contact who can assist with means restriction.