Suicide Risk: Case Studies and Vignettes

Identifying Warning Signs Case Study

Taken from Patterson, C. W. (1981). Suicide. In Basic Psychopathology: A Programmed Text.

Instructions: Underline all words and phrases in the following case history that are related to INCREASED suicidal risk. Then answer the questions at the end of the exercise.

History of Present Illness

The client is a 65-year-old white male, divorced, living alone, admitted to the hospital in a near comatose condition yesterday because of an overdose of approximately thirty tablets of Valium, 5 mgm, combined with alcoholic intoxication. The client was given supportive care and is alert at the present time.

A heavy drinker, he has been unemployed from his janitorial job for the past three months because of his drinking. He acknowledges feeling increasingly depressed since being fired, and for the past two weeks has had insomnia, anorexia, and a ten pound weight loss. He indicates he wanted to die, had been thinking of suicide for the past week, planned the overdose, but had to “get drunk” because “I didn’t have the guts” [to kill myself]. He is unhappy that the attempt failed, states that, “nobody can help me” and he sees no way to help himself. He denies having any close relationships or caring how others would feel if he committed suicide (“who is there who cares?”). He views death as a “relief.” His use of alcohol has increased considerably in the past month. He denies having any hobbies or activities, “just drinking.”

Past Psychiatric History

Hospitalized in 1985 at Pleasantview Psychiatric Hospital for three months following a suicide attempt after his fourth wife left him. Treated with ECT, he did “pretty good, but only for about two years” thereafter.

Social History

An only child, his parents are deceased (father died by suicide when client was eight years old; mother died of “old age” two years ago). Raised in Boston, he moved to Los Angeles at twenty-one and has lived here since. Completed eighth grade (without any repeat) but quit to go to work (family needed money). Has never held a job longer than two years, usually quitting or being fired because of “my temper.” Usually worked as a laborer. Denies any physical problems other than feeling “tired all the time.” Currently living on Social Security income, he has no other financial resources. He received a bad conduct discharge from the army after three months for “disobeying an order and punching the officer.” He has had no legal problems other than several arrests in the past two years for public intoxication. Married and divorced four times, he has no children or close friends.

Mental Status Examination

65 y.o. W/M, short, thin, grey-haired, unkempt, with 2-3 day-old beard, lying passively in bed and avoiding eye contact. His speech was slow and he did not spontaneously offer information. Passively cooperative. Little movement of his extremities. His facial expression was sad and immobile.

Thought processes were logical and coherent, and no delusions or hallucinations were noted. Theme of talk centered around how hopeless the future was and his wishes to be dead. There were no thoughts about wishing to harm others.

Mood was one of depression. He was oriented to person, place, and time, and recent and remote memory was intact. He could perform simple calculations and his general fund of knowledge was fair. His intelligence was judged average.

Diagnostic Impression

  1. drug overdose (Valium and alcohol)
  2. Dysthymic Disorder (depression)
  3. Substance Use Disorder (alcohol)

Questions for Exercise

You have interviewed the client, obtained the above history, and now have to make some decisions about the client. He wants to leave the hospital.

  1. Is he a significant risk for suicide?
  2. Would you recommend:
    1. discharging him as he wishes and with your concurrence?
    2. discharging him against medical advice (A.M.A.)?
    3. discharging him if he promises to see a therapist at a nearby mental health center within the next few days?
    4. holding him for purposes of getting his psychiatric in-client care even though he objects?
  3. Discuss briefly why you would not have chosen the other alternatives in question #2.

Identifying Warning Signs Case Study: Feedback/Answers

History of Present Illness

The client is a 65-year-old white maledivorcedliving alone, admitted to the hospital in a near comatose condition yesterday because of an overdose of approximately thirty tablets of Valium, 5 mgm, combined with alcoholic intoxication. The client was given supportive care and is alert at the present time.
heavy drinker, he has been unemployed from his janitorial job for the past three months because of his drinking. He acknowledges feeling increasingly depressed since being fired, and for the past two weeks has had insomnia and a ten pound weight loss. He indicates he wanted to die, had been thinking of suicide for the past week, planned the overdose, but had to “get drunk” because “I didn’t have the guts” [to kill myself]. He is unhappy that the attempt failed, states that, “nobody can help me” and he sees no way to help himself. He denies having any close relationships or caring how others would feel if he committed suicide (“who is there who cares?”). He views death as a “relief.” His use of alcohol has increased considerably in the past month. He denies having any hobbies or activities, “just drinking.”

Past Psychiatric History

Hospitalized in 1985 at Pleasantview Psychiatric Hospital for three months following a suicide attempt after his fourth wife left him. Treated with ECT, he did “pretty good, but only for about two years” thereafter.

Social History

An only child, his parents are deceased (father died by suicide when client was eight years old; mother died of “old age” two years ago). Raised in Boston, he moved to Los Angeles at twenty-one and has lived here since. Completed eighth grade (without any repeat) but quit to go to work (family needed money). Has never held a job longer than two years, usually quitting or being fired because of “my temper.” Usually worked as a laborer. Denies any physical problems other than feeling “tired all the time.” Currently living on Social Security income, he has no other financial resources. He received a bad conduct discharge from the army after three months for “disobeying an order and punching the officer.” He has had no legal problems other than several arrests in the past two years for public intoxication. Married and divorced four times, he has no children or close friends.

Mental Status Examination

65 y.o. W/M, short, thin, grey-haired, unkempt, with 2-3 day-old beard, lying passively in bed and avoiding eye contact. His speech was slow and he did not spontaneously offer information. Passively cooperative. Little movement of his extremities. His facial expression was sad and immobile.
Thought processes were logical and coherent, and no delusions or hallucinations were noted. Theme of talk centered around how hopeless the future was and his wishes to be dead. There were no thoughts about wishing to harm others.
Mood was one of depression. He was oriented to person, place, and time, and recent and remote memory was intact. He could perform simple calculations and his general fund of knowledge was fair. His intelligence was judged average.

Diagnostic Impression

  1. drug overdose (Valium and alcohol)
  2. Dysthymic Disorder (depression)
  3. Substance Use Disorder (alcohol)

Questions for Exercise

You have interviewed the client, obtained the above history, and now have to make some decisions about the client. He wants to leave the hospital.

  1. Is he a significant risk for suicide? Yes. The client presents a considerable suicidal risk, with respect to demographic characteristics, psychiatric diagnosis and mental status findings.
  2. Would you recommend:
    1. discharging him as he wishes and with your concurrence?
    2. discharging him against medical advice (A.M.A.)?
    3. discharging him if he promises to see a therapist at a nearby mental health center within the next few days?
    4. holding him for purposes of getting his psychiatric in-client care even though he objects?
  3. Discuss briefly why you would not have chosen the other alternatives in question #2. The client appears to be actively suicidal at the present time,and may act upon his feelings. Nothing about his life has changed because of his attempt. He still is lonely, with limited social resources. He feels no remorse for his suicidal behavior and his future remains unaltered. He must be hospitalized until some therapeutic progress can be made.

Short-Term Suicide Risk Vignettes

*Case study vignettes taken from Maris, R. W., Berman, A. L., Maltsberger, J. T., & Yufit, R. I. (Eds), (1992). Assessment and prediction of suicide. New York: Guilford.
And originally cited in Stelmachers, Z. T., & Sherman, R. E. (1990). Use of case vignettes in suicide risk assessment. Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior, 20, 65-84.

The assessment of suicide risk is a complicated process. The following vignettes are provided to promote discussion of suicide risk factors, assessment procedures, and intervention strategies. The “answers” are not provided, rather students are encouraged to discuss cases with each other and faculty. Two examples of how discussions may be facilitated are provided.

Case 1

37-year-old white female, self-referred. Stated plan is to drive her car off a bridge. Precipitant seems to be verbal abuse by her boss; after talking to her nightly for hours, he suddenly refused to talk to her. As a result, patient feels angry and hurt, threatened to kill herself. She is also angry at her mother, who will not let patient smoke or bring men to their home. Current alcohol level is .15; patient is confused, repetitive, and ataxic. History reveals a previous suicide attempt (overdose) 7 years ago, which resulted in hospitalization. After spending the night at CIC and sobering, patient denies further suicidal intent.

Case 2

16-year-old Native American female, self-referred following an overdose of 12 aspirins. Precipitant: could not tolerate rumors at school that she and another girl are sharing the same boyfriend. Denies being suicidal at this time (“I won’t do it again; I learned my lesson”). Reports that she has always had difficulty expressing her feelings. In the interview, is quiet, guarded, and initially quite reluctant to talk. Diagnostic impression: adjustment disorder.

Case 3

49-year-old white female brought by police on a transportation hold following threats to overdose on aspirin (initially telephoned CIC and was willing to give her address). Patient feels trapped and abused, can’t cope at home with her schizophrenic sister. Wants to be in the hospital and continues to feel like killing herself. Husband indicates that the patient has been threatening to shoot him and her daughter but probably has no gun. Recent arrest for disorderly conduct (threatened police with a butcher knife). History of aspirin overdose 3 years ago. In the interview, patient is cooperative; appears depressed, anxious, helpless, and hopeless. Appetite and sleep are down, and so is her self-esteem. Is described as “anhedonic.” Alcohol level: .12.

Case 4

23-year-od white male, self-referred. Patient bought a gun 2 months ago to kill himself and claims to have the gun and four shells in his car (police found the gun but no shells). Patient reports having planned time and place for suicide several times in the past. States that he cannot live any more with his “emotional pain” since his wife left him3 years ago. This pain has increased during the last week, but the patient cannot pinpoint any precipitant. Patient has a history of chemical dependency, but has been sober for 20 months and currently goes to AA.

Case 5

22-year-old black male referred to CIC from the Emergency Room on a transportation hold. He referred himself to the Emergency Room after making fairly deep cuts on his wrists requiring nine stitches. Current stress is recent breakup with his girlfriend and loss of job. Has developed depressive symptoms for the last 2 months, including social withdrawal, insomnia, anhedonia, and decreased appetite. Blames his sister for the breakup with girlfriend. Makes threats to sister (“I will slice up that bitch, she is dead when I get out”). Patient is an alcoholic who just completed court-ordered chemical dependency treatment lasting 3 weeks. He is also on parole for attempted rape. There is a history of previous suicide attempts and assaultive behavior, which led to the patient being jailed. In the interview, patient is vague regarding recent events and history. He denies intent to kill himself but admits to still being quite ambivalent about it. Diagnostic impression: antisocial personality.

Case 6

19-year-old white male found by roommate in a “sluggish” state following the ingestion of 10 sleeping pills (Sominex) and one bottle of whiskey. Recently has been giving away his possessions and has written a suicide note. After being brought to the Emergency Room, declares that he will do it again. Blood alcohol level: .23. For the last 3 or 4 weeks there has been sleep and appetite disturbance, with a 15-pound weight loss and subjective feelings of depression. Diagnostic impression: adjustment disorder with depressed mood versus major depressive episode. Patient refused hospitalization.

Case 7

30-year-old white male brought from his place of employment by a personnel representative. Patient has been thinking of suicide “all the time” because he “can’t cope.” Has a knot in his stomach; sleep and appetite are down (sleeps only 3 hours per night); and plans either to shoot himself, jump off a bridge, or drive recklessly. Precipitant: constant fighting with his wife leading to a recent breakup (there is a long history of mutual verbal/physical abuse). There is a history of a serious suicide attempt: patient jumped off a ledge and fractured both legs; the precipitant for that attempt was a previous divorce. There is a history of chemical dependency with two courses of treatment. There is no current problem with alcohol or drugs. Patient is tearful, shaking, frightened, feeling hopeless, and at high risk for impulsive acting out. He states that life isn’t worthwhile.

Vignette Discussion Examples

Vignette Example 1

Twenty-six year old white female phoned her counselor, stated that she might take pills, and then hung up and kept the phone off the hook. The counselor called the police and the patient was brought to the crisis intervention center on a transportation hold. Patient was angry, denied suicidal attempt, and refused evaluation; described as selectively mute, which means she wouldn’t answer any of the questions she didn’t like.

Facilitator: How high a risk is this person for committing suicide? Low, moderate or high?
Student Answer 1: Maybe moderate because the person is warning somebody, basically a plea for help.
Facilitator: Okay, so we have suicidal talk. That’s one of our red flags. What else?
She said she might take pills, so we didn’t know if she does have the pills. So she has a plan. The plan would be to take pills, but we don’t know if we have means.
Student Answer 2: High. She’s also angry. I don’t know if she’s angry often.
Facilitator: A person in this situation who is really thinking about killing themselves tends not to deny it. They tend not to deny it. There are exceptions to everything, but most of the time, for some reason, this is one of the things where people tend to mostly tell you the truth. If you ask people, they tend to tell you the truth. It’s a very funny thing about suicide that way. That’s certainly not true about most things. If you ask people how much they drink…But, “Are you thinking about killing yourself?” “Well, yes.” If you ask a question, you tend to get a more or less accurate, straight answer.
Student question: Is that because it doesn’t matter anymore? If they’re going to die anyway, who’s going to care about what anybody thinks or what happens?
Facilitator: My hypothesis would be, when someone is at that point, they’re talking about real, true things. They’re not into play. This is where they are. If they’re really looking at it, then they’re just at that place. What’s to hide at that point? You don’t have anything to lose. It’s a state of mind. And then if you’re not in that place—it’s like, how close are you to the edge of that cliff? “I’m not there. I know where that is, and I’m not there.” “If you get there, will you tell me?” “Yeah, I’m not there.” So, people have a sense—if they’ve gotten that close, they know where that line is, and they know about where they stand in regard to it, because it’s a very hard-edged, true thing.

Vignette 2

Twenty-three year old white male, self-referred. Patient bought a gun two months ago to kill himself and claims to have the gun and four shells in his car. Police found the gun but no shells. Patient reports having planned time and place for suicide several times in the past. States that he cannot live anymore with his emotional pain since his wife left him three years ago. This pain has increased during the last week, but the patient cannot pinpoint any precipitant. Patient has a history of chemical dependency but has been sober for 20 months and currently goes to AA.

Facilitator: How high a risk is this person for committing suicide? Low, moderate or high? On a scale from 0 to 7 (7 being very high).
Student Answer 1: High.
On a scale of 0 to 7?
Student Answer: Six.
Student Answer 2: I would say three. I think it would be lower because if he’s already bought the gun two months ago and he’s self-referring himself to get help, he wants to live. He has not made peace with whatever, and he’s more likely not give away his things, and he’s going to AA meetings. I think it’s lower than really an extreme…I would say a three or four.
Student Answer 3: I would say a four or five, moderate.
Student Answer 4: About a five..several times and hasn’t followed through, tells me he doesn’t really want to follow through with it.
Facilitator: And there are no shells, right? So we can see some of the red flags are there, but some of them aren’t. He’s still sober…
Student: He has a support group.
Student: He’s not using, though he bought a gun—so that’s a concern. There is a lot there.
Student: He may not have the shells so he doesn’t have the opportunity to.
So does that make him more…?
Student 2: Think I’ll change mine to a five.
Facilitator: So the mean was 4.68, so 5 was the mode. If we’re saying this is a moderate risk, what things would we look for that would make this a high risk?
Student: Take away AA.
Student: If he falls off the wagon, he goes right to the top.
Student: And if he finds the shells.
Facilitator: Because it probably is not that hard to find shells. All these stores around here, you can get shells quicker than you can get a gun, so he’s only a five-minute purchase away from having lethal—in contrast to not having the gun.
Student: Could there be a difference in the time? Let’s say his wife left him just four to six months ago rather than three years. Would that be something that would be more serious?
Facilitator: Yes, or if his wife just left him. So, say his wife left him a month ago that would bump it up. So that’s unresolved. That’s taking a person that was worried and that’s pushing him higher.
Student: It also raises the homicide rate.
Facilitator: Yes, because these tend to be murder-suicides. How often have we seen that? Murder-suicide is a big deal. If she won’t be with me, she won’t be with anybody.