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01 | Introduction to PROTECT: Novel Solutions to Suicide Risk Management

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Manage episode 316778873 series 3300327
Content provided by Manaan Kar Ray. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Manaan Kar Ray or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Would love to hear your thoughts...

Episode 01 introduces Relational Safety, the golden thread through PROTECT:
A person with suicidal ideation is often trapped in an overwhelming sense of despair (Beck, 1986). Stemming from entrapment, suicide may become the salient solution to life circumstances (O’connor, 2011) and intense psychological pain (Shneidman, 1993). Suicide is a major public health problem, with over 800,000 people dying annually worldwide, and for each completed suicide, there may have been 20 other attempts (World Health Organization, 2014). To support those in suicidal distress, professionals, families and friends strive to establish new and alternative ways of coping (Jobes, 2006, p. 122; Owens et al., 2011). However, there is a dissonance between the reality of those experiencing a crisis, for whom suicide is the perceived solution, and those that are caring, who view suicide as the problem (Duffy, 2006). Reconciling these positions is difficult as professionals have to understand the person’s pain before they can form a collaborative partnership on the road to recovery (Michel & Jobes, 2011). In a serious suicidal crisis, recovery-oriented practice is often sacrificed on the altar of safety, and care becomes prescriptive. In our previous work in reducing coercion in care in the acute setting (PROMISE), staff and patients highlighted the difficulties in striking this balance. They described the restrictive practice as “it never is very nice… but it is a necessary evil” (Wilson, Rouse, Rae, & Kar Ray, 2017). 86% of study participants highlighted the importance of enhancing relationships through empathic communication as a way of overcoming the challenges posed (Wilson, Rouse, Rae, & Kar Ray, 2018).
Connect with Assoc Prof Manaan Kar Ray on Linkedin
Follow us on www.progress.guide

  continue reading

44 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 316778873 series 3300327
Content provided by Manaan Kar Ray. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Manaan Kar Ray or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Would love to hear your thoughts...

Episode 01 introduces Relational Safety, the golden thread through PROTECT:
A person with suicidal ideation is often trapped in an overwhelming sense of despair (Beck, 1986). Stemming from entrapment, suicide may become the salient solution to life circumstances (O’connor, 2011) and intense psychological pain (Shneidman, 1993). Suicide is a major public health problem, with over 800,000 people dying annually worldwide, and for each completed suicide, there may have been 20 other attempts (World Health Organization, 2014). To support those in suicidal distress, professionals, families and friends strive to establish new and alternative ways of coping (Jobes, 2006, p. 122; Owens et al., 2011). However, there is a dissonance between the reality of those experiencing a crisis, for whom suicide is the perceived solution, and those that are caring, who view suicide as the problem (Duffy, 2006). Reconciling these positions is difficult as professionals have to understand the person’s pain before they can form a collaborative partnership on the road to recovery (Michel & Jobes, 2011). In a serious suicidal crisis, recovery-oriented practice is often sacrificed on the altar of safety, and care becomes prescriptive. In our previous work in reducing coercion in care in the acute setting (PROMISE), staff and patients highlighted the difficulties in striking this balance. They described the restrictive practice as “it never is very nice… but it is a necessary evil” (Wilson, Rouse, Rae, & Kar Ray, 2017). 86% of study participants highlighted the importance of enhancing relationships through empathic communication as a way of overcoming the challenges posed (Wilson, Rouse, Rae, & Kar Ray, 2018).
Connect with Assoc Prof Manaan Kar Ray on Linkedin
Follow us on www.progress.guide

  continue reading

44 episodes

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