Working with the suicidal patient in general practice

Dr Nick Bendit

Probably the most difficult patient to provide therapy to is the one who is chronically suicidal. We worry about many aspects of their care, because a patient committing suicide is one of the worst things we can face. First, and foremost, we want to help our patients, and a completed suicide is the most concrete manifestation that we haven’t.

Not only do we feel we failed them, but we are likely to question our own competence, and the rest of the world is likely to question our competence and the therapy we delivered. This includes family and friends of the patient, our colleagues, the public, and the legal system. This underlying anxiety when working with the chronically suicidal patient has a powerful effect on the therapeutic process.

Conflict of Interest: None disclosed
Financial Support/Funding: None disclosed
Recorded: NewCastle, Australia, Nov. 2009. Web Cast to the Australian College of Psychological Medicine.
Visit the A.C.Psych.Med. at  www.acpm.org.au

Nick Bendit
Nick Bendit
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Dr Nick Bendit

Dr. Nick Bendit is a staff specialist in psychiatry and conjoint lecturer at the University of Newcastle.  He works at the Centre for Psychotherapy, a public outpatient psychotherapy unit treating patients with borderline personality disorder and eating disorders.  He has a 20 year history of working in psychotherapy both in private practice and public health. At the Centre for Psychotherapy he uses dialectical behaviour therapy (DBT) and the conversational model (an adapted psychodynamic model). He is involved in teaching and supervision of psychiatry trainees and postgraduate psychologists.

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