How Do We Find a Therapist for Suicide Outpatient Treatment?
Natalie Staats Reiss, Ph.D., and Mark Dombeck, Ph.D.If someone's need for acute care is not urgent and/or if he or she is being discharged from the ER or the hospital, you may need to help find a psychotherapist to continue care. Hopefully, your friend or family member will be provided with a list of appropriate local therapists as he or she is leaving the ER or the hospital (ask for such a list if one is not automatically provided).
It can seem overwhelming to recently discharged patients to follow up with the task of setting up a therapy appointment. You can make this task less difficult for your friend or family member by assisting with the task of interviewing therapists to see if they are a good potential fit. For example, is the therapist on the necessary insurance provider panel listing? Are they local? Do they have open appointments during convenient times? Then help to set up an appointment. Be sure to explain to each therapist you speak with that the suicidal person was (or is) suicidal. If you don't make the urgency of the situation clear, and the psychotherapist has a busy schedule (which is likely), it may be some time before a first appointment can occur. If therapists know your situation is urgent, they may find a way to get the suicidal person in sooner. If a therapist you call cannot give you an appointment soon enough, call another therapist or two until you get a timely appointment. Ask therapists for further referrals. They will almost surely know of other experienced clinicians practicing in your local area.
You may also need to offer to transport someone to his or her first (or subsequent) treatment sessions. While you are certainly not a chauffeur, addressing these types of barriers can go a long way to ensure that your friend or family member gets better. Try to enlist the support of other people who can also pitch and drive to appointments.
Despite the trouble it may be for you to assist with the therapy referral process, it is particularly important that you do what you can to assist the recently discharged suicidal person with the task of making and then showing up for a therapy appointment. Research suggests that the risk of suicide relapse remains high during the first month after being discharged from the hospital, and a therapy appointment is a way of managing that risk.
If you do not already have a list of appropriate local therapists, you can search for local therapists online here. Further guidance for choosing a psychotherapist can be found here.
You may also wish to offer a recently suicidal person assistance with other aspects of daily living so as to help him or her manage stressors while transitioning back to normal life. The temptation is to say something like "call me if you need anything", but this instruction ends up being vague. It is better to offer specific types of assistance. Make a few specific offers and let the recently suicidal person choose from among them. For example, offering to walk the dog, to run out for some groceries, or to provide temporary childcare may be helpful.













Resources
-
Articles
-
The Nature of Suicide
- The Nature of Suicide
- Defining Suicide
- Suicide: A Reactive Action
- Suicide Statistics
- Other Factors Contributing to Suicide Risk
- Suicide Triggers
- Suicide Triggers Continued
- Tying it All Together: Why Does Someone Become Suicidal?
- Becoming Suicidal: Biological Contributions
- Becoming Suicidal: Sociocultural Contributions
- Suicide Prevention and Societal Measures
- Websites
-
Coping with Suicidality
- Coping with Suicidality
- How did you get to this suicidal place?
- Why does suicide seem like a solution to your problem(s)?
- How do you know your level of suicide risk?
- Suicide Warning Signs
- Suicide: What Should I Do if I'm Suicidal?
- Suicide: What will happen to you when you ask for help?
- Outpatient Suicide Treatment-Finding A Psychotherapist
- The Initial Suicide Treatment Interview
- Jeremy's Story
- Follow-up Suicide Therapy Visits
- Suicide: Other Things You Can Do to Help Keep Yourself Safe
- Suicide and Self Harm Resources
-
Helping A Friend or Family Member who is Suicidal
- Helping a Friend or Family Member Who is Suicidal
- Understanding Suicidal Crises
- Why Do People Become Suicidal and What Can I do to Help?
- How Can I Judge the Level of Suicide Risk?
- What Are Other Suicide Warning Signs?
- What Happens When a Suicidal Person Asks for Help?
- How Do We Find a Therapist for Suicide Outpatient Treatment?
- What Else Can I Do to Help a Suicidal Family Member or Friend?
- How Do I Handle My Own Reactions Following a Suicide or a Suicide Attempt?
-
The Nature of Suicide
-
News
-
Questions and Answers
- How Can I Convince My Suicidal MD Husband To Be Evaluated?
- No Clue What To Do. Help?
- In A Bad Situation
- When Psychotherapy Does Not Help
- Depression Treatment
- Therapist rights to contact Employer
- Does a therapist have to report me as suicidal if I tell her I self injure?
- OCD
- Will I Ever?
- Self-Injury / Self-Harm: How do I stop cutting myself?
-
32 more
- Psych major wants to get her life back after being raped and attempting suicide
- A Friend in Need
- Mild Personality Disorder
- hard decision
- My husband won't take his medicine
- What is the point of life?
- Regular thoughts of killing myself
- I'm a cutter and can't remember anything
- Does thinking of suicide lead to suicide?
- I Sometimes Cut
- When To Ask For Suicide Help
- Inability To Express Myself
- Suicidal
- Suicidal Friend
- Suicidal Teen
- Self-Harming Attention Seeker
- Her Only Friend
- Is This Depression?
- Hate Ex-Boyfriend
- Potentially Suicidal Boyfriend
- Talking Dice
- Self-injurer
- Suicide Threat Relationships (a long one)
- Therapy for Cutters
- Deep Feelings of Suicide
- Self-Injuring Sister
- Self-Injury
- The Aftermath of Suicide
- Poly-addiction?
- Cutting
- Severely Depressed
- Threatened by Suicide if I Leave
-
Book & Media Reviews
- A Sadly Troubled History
- Alive
- Autopsy of a Suicidal Mind
- Bloodletting
- Boy Interrupted
- Comprehending Suicide
- Crosses
- Duplicity
- Eight Stories Up
- Fatal Attachments
-
26 more
- Heavier than Heaven
- Her Husband
- History of Suicide
- How I Stayed Alive When My Brain Was Trying to Kill Me
- Human Dignity and Assisted Death
- Leaving You
- Life Interrupted
- Like the Red Panda
- Making Sense of Suicide
- Myths about Suicide
- Night Falls Fast
- No Right Turn
- One in Thirteen
- Relational Suicide Assessment
- Silent Grief
- Suicidal
- Suicidal Behavior in Children and Adolescents
- Suicide
- Sylvia
- Sylvia Plath
- Sylvia Plath Reads
- The Art of Misdiagnosis
- The Clinical Science of Suicide Prevention
- The Final Leap
- Thirteen Reasons Why
- Unholy Ghost
-
Links
-
Videos
- Developing the Family Intervention for Suicide Prevention (FISP)
- Addressing the Rise of Teen Suicide
- Feeling down? Let's talk - Prevention of suicide among adolescents
- NPW 2017: Suicide and Substance Use in Young People
- Addressing Suicide
- Suicide Warning Signs
- How to Ask if Someone is Suicidal
- Suicide Tops Injury Deaths
- Assessment and Intervention with Suicidal Clients: Volume 2
- Assessment and Intervention with Suicidal Clients: Volume 1
-
14 more
- Assessment and Intervention with Suicidal Clients: Volume 3
- Preventing suicide: a global imperative
- Youth Suicide Risk
- Preventing Death by Suicide-Strategies to Help Children, Youth and Families
- The bridge between suicide and life
- Beyond the Data -- Preventing Suicide: A Comprehensive Public Health Approach
- Preventing Suicide: A Comprehensive Public Health Approach
- For Those Considering Suicide
- How to Help Someone Who is Suicidal
- Teen Suicide Prevention
- Reach Out - Preventing Teen Suicide
- Suicide Prevention with Lynn Keane
- Addressing Suicidal Thoughts and Behaviors in Substance Abuse Treatment
- Suicide Signs
-
More Information
Topics
-
Related Topic Centers
-
Addictions
-
Aging & Elder Care
-
Assessments & Interventions
-
Career & Workplace
-
Emotional Well-Being
-
Life Issues
-
Parenting & Child Care
-
Abuse
-
ADHD: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
-
Adoption
-
Autism
-
Child & Adolescent Development: Overview
-
Child & Adolescent Development: Puberty
-
Child Development & Parenting: Early (3-7)
-
Child Development & Parenting: Infants (0-2)
-
Child Development & Parenting: Middle (8-11)
-
Child Development & Parenting:Adolescence (12-24)
-
Child Development Theory: Adolescence (12-24)
-
Child Development Theory: Middle Childhood (8-11)
-
Childhood Mental Disorders and Illnesses
-
Childhood Special Education
-
Divorce
-
Family & Relationship Issues
-
Intellectual Disabilities
-
Learning Disorders
-
Oppositional Defiant Disorder
-
Parenting
-
Self Esteem
-
-
Psychological Disorders
-
Anxiety Disorders
-
Bipolar Disorder
-
Conversion Disorders
-
Depression: Depression & Related Conditions
-
Dissociative Disorders
-
Domestic Violence and Rape
-
Eating Disorders
-
Impulse Control Disorders
-
Intellectual Disabilities
-
Mental Disorders
-
Obsessive-Compulsive Spectrum Disorders
-
Personality Disorders
-
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
-
Schizophrenia
-
Sexual Disorders
-
Somatic Symptom and Related Disorders
-
Suicide
-
Tourettes and other Tic Disorders
-