Why Primary Care?

The problem of the suicidal patient in Primary Care

A moral imperative

How to identify suicidal patients

Assess risk

Protective factors

What to do with the hot potato: keep the patient safe

Primary Care Toolkit

Source:oregonsuicideprevention.org/zerosuicide/primarycare/toolkitcentraloregon

Research on limiting access to lethal means in suicidal patients

Research hypothesis

• Discussions that occur in primary care settings about patients voluntarily limiting access to firearms during periods of suicidal ideation will achieve successful outcomes if culturally appropriate messaging about firearm safety is identified and implemented.

Methods

Findings

• Guns are Pervasive: members of this demographic own multiple firearms, many loaded at all times, often not locked or not stored in secure locations.

• Firearm Safety: most frequently cited basis of firearm safety has been explicit training of children and young adults, primarily through instruction from family members, and secondarily through formal firearms safety courses.

• Firearm Taboo: highly inappropriate to ask someone where they keep their guns, how many guns they have, and other details of firearm ownership and safety in the home.

• The above suggests that traditional, public health driven, firearm safety discourses (e.g. store ammunition separately from weapons, use a gun safe, impersonal physician in-take forms) may be ineffective for at least some portion of the gun-owning population.

• Crisis Situations: in discussions of actual and hypothetical mental health crises with the potential for suicide, trust in the person asking the individual to relinquish their firearm is deemed fundamental. A trusted friend or family member can successfully breach the Firearm Taboo.

• Trust in Primary Care: extremely important; point blank questions about firearm ownership (including intake checklists) or means restriction from someone who has not established trust are often perceived as threatening and antagonistic; fear of reporting to a government registry, especially among veterans.

• Suicide Prevention as an Expression of Cultural Values: optimism about efficacy of making culturally-appropriate resources available in a primary care setting; means restriction would be treated as a basic extension of cultural values that emphasize firearm safety (rather than “loss of access”) and care for friends and family.

Message testing for patient education material

Findings

Implications

Links to Firearm Safety Toolkit

Source: www.ohsu.edu/sites/default/files/2019-05/2018%20Forum%20How%20to%20Address%20Firearm%20Safety%20with%20the%20Rural%20Suicidal%20Patient.pdf