A nurse assesses five newly hospitalized patients. Which patients have the highest suicide risk?
- A. An 82-year-old white man
- B. A 17-year-old white female adolescent
- C. A 39-year-old African-American man
- D. A 29-year-old African-American woman
- E. A 22-year-old man with a traumatic brain injury
Correct Answer: A,B,E
Rationale: Whites have suicide rates almost twice those of nonwhites, and the rate is particularly high for older adult men, adolescents, and young adults. Other high-risk groups include young African-American men, Native-American men, older Asian Americans, and persons with traumatic brain injury.
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A staff nurse tells another nurse, 'I evaluated a new patient using the modified SAD PERSONS scale and got a score of 10. I'm wondering if I should send the patient home.' Select the best reply by the second nurse.
- A. That action would seem appropriate.'
- B. A score over 8 requires immediate hospitalization.'
- C. I think you should strongly consider hospitalization for this patient.'
- D. Give the patient a follow-up appointment. Hospitalization may be needed soon.'
Correct Answer: B
Rationale: The modified SAD PERSONS scale score of 0 to 5 suggests home care with follow-up. A score of 6 to 8 requires psychiatric consultation. A score over 8 calls for hospitalization.
What is the most helpful response for a nurse to make when a patient being treated as an outpatient states, 'I am considering suicide.'?
- A. I'm glad you shared this. Please do not worry. We will handle it together.'
- B. I think you should admit yourself to the hospital to get help.'
- C. We need to talk about the good things you have to live for.'
- D. Bringing this up is a very positive action on your part.'
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: This response gives the patient reinforcement and validation for making a positive response rather than acting out the suicidal impulse. It gives neither advice nor false reassurance, and it does not imply stereotypes such as, 'You have a lot to live for.' It uses the patient's ambivalence and sets the stage for more realistic problem-solving strategies.
A tearful, anxious patient at the outpatient clinic reports, 'I should be dead.' The initial task of the nurse conducting the assessment interview is to focus on what?
- A. Assessing the lethality of any suicide plan
- B. Encouraging expression of anger
- C. Establishing a rapport with the patient
- D. Determining risk factors for suicide
Correct Answer: C
Rationale: Establishing rapport will allow the nurse to obtain relevant assessment data such as the presence of a suicide plan, the lethality of a suicide plan, and the presence of risk factors for suicide.
Four individuals have given information about their suicide plans. Which plan evidences the highest suicide risk?
- A. Jumping from a 100-foot-high railroad bridge located in a deserted area late at night
- B. Turning on the oven and letting gas escape into the apartment during the night
- C. Cutting the wrists in the bathroom while the spouse reads in the next room
- D. Overdosing on aspirin with codeine while the spouse is out with friends
Correct Answer: A
Rationale: This is a highly lethal method with little opportunity for rescue. The other options are lower lethality methods with higher rescue potential.
A nurse answers a suicide crisis line. A caller says, 'I live alone in a home several miles from my nearest neighbors. I have been considering suicide for 2 months. I have had several drinks and now my gun is loaded. I'm going to shoot myself in the heart.' How would the nurse assess the lethality of this plan?
- A. No risk
- B. Low level
- C. Moderate level
- D. High level
Correct Answer: D
Rationale: The patient has a highly detailed plan, a highly lethal method, the means to carry it out, lowered impulse control because of alcohol ingestion, and a low potential for rescue.
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