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Dr. Kirk Honda discusses suicide assessment and treatment.

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January 29, 2020

The Psychology In Seattle Podcast ®

Trigger Warning: This episode may include topics such as assault, trauma, and discrimination. If necessary, listeners are encouraged to refrain from listening and care for their safety and well-being.

Disclaimer: The content provided is for educational, informational, and entertainment purposes only. Nothing here constitutes personal or professional consultation, therapy, diagnosis, or creates a counselor-client relationship. Topics discussed may generate differing points of view. If you participate (by being a guest, submitting a question, or commenting) you must do so with the knowledge that we cannot control reactions or responses from others, which may not agree with you or feel unfair. Your participation on this site is at your own risk, accepting full responsibility for any liability or harm that may result. Anything you write here may be used for discussion or endorsement of the podcast. Opinions and views expressed by the host and guest hosts are personal views. Although, we take precautions and fact check, they should not be considered facts and the opinions may change. Opinions posted by participants (such as comments) are not those of the hosts. Readers should not rely on any information found here and should perform due diligence before taking any action. For a more extensive description of factors for you to consider, please see www.psychologyinseattle.com

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Comments

Anonymous

Thank you for explaining how suicide contagion can work with those close to you. My therapist recently mentioned it too when I was talking about how I wasn’t able to attend a good friend’s funeral who died by suicide. I had ideation at the time and I felt like if I went I would not be able to resist it. Many of our mutual friends were judgmental of me for not attending but I’m glad I didn’t. (I can’t totally blame them because no one knew my reasons.) They even came to my home the day of and offered to drive me; I still refused. This was over a decade ago and I’m luckily not struggling with ideation anymore. But you are so right that with his death it suddenly became a concrete option.

Anonymous

When you know someone who did it, it is very hard to listen.