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"Will you treat me? I'm suicidal!" The effect of patient gender, suicidal severity, and therapist characteristics on the therapist's likelihood to treat a hypothetical suicidal patient.

Sharon Almaliah-RauscherNoa EttingerYossi Levi-BelzYari Gvion
Published in: Clinical psychology & psychotherapy (2020)
The purpose of our study was to broaden the understanding regarding mental health professionals' willingness to treat and likeliness to refer suicidal patients to other professionals. More specifically, our aim was to examine the effect of the patient's gender and suicidal severity, as well as the mental health professionals' personal and professional characteristics, on the willingness to treat and likeliness to refer. A total of 331 mental health professionals were randomly exposed to one of four case descriptions of a hypothetical patient in a crisis. The cases shared a common background story; however, they differed in terms of the patient's gender and suicidal condition (high vs. low). The exposure was followed by questionnaires aimed to reflect the subject's evaluation of the patient's suicidal severity, the subject's sense of competence and responsibility, willingness to treat or likeliness to refer, emotional contagion, and depression. The results indicate a lower willingness to treat and higher likelihood to refer suicidal patients compared with depressed patients. In addition, subjects exposed to the high suicidality cases showed a greater willingness to treat and refer female patients compared with male patients. A sense of competence was found as the strongest predictor of mental health professionals' willingness to treat and likelihood to refer, and emotional contagion was found as a predictor of likelihood to refer. It is important that mental health professionals be aware of the low tendency to treat suicidal patients especially if they are male. Further research should explore suitable training programmes and their application in the mental health curriculum.
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