. Coming to a Safety Decision
According to the American Psychiatric Association (2003), “the estimation of suicide risk, at the culmination of the suicide assessment, is the quintessential clinical judgment” (p. 24). From our perspective, clinical judgment is quintessentially a decision about the client’s safety that takes shape, often gradually and seldom linearly, over the course of a suicide assessment, informed by an empathic grasp of the client’s intra- and interpersonal risks and resources. In order to come to a decision about the client’s potential for staying safe over the coming days, you must continually juxtapose different sources of information throughout the session:
• Your empathic grasp of the client’s intrapersonal and interpersonal risks and resources.
• Your perceptions of the client’s engagement with you in the assessment process, including his or her response to your empathic comments, to your questions, to your therapeutic suggestions (both direct and implicit), and to the development and possible implementation of the safety plan (see Step 3, below).
• Your insider (empathic) and outsider (professional) sense of whether the safety plan feels safe.
For reasons outlined earlier, we don’t believe it makes sense to try to metaphorically “weigh” or quantify these data as a means for decision-making. Instead, we again turn to qualitative researchers for inspiration. They analyze their data by juxtaposing information from various sources, allowing understanding to “emerge” from the ongoing comparisons. There is an appreciation in this process not only of analytical (outsider or professional) understanding, but