The Collaborative Assessment and Management of Suicidality with Suicidal Service Members

Author(s):  
David A. Jobes ◽  
Blaire C. Schembari ◽  
Keith W. Jennings

This chapter provides an overview of an evidence-based, suicide-specific, clinical approach called the Collaborative Assessment and Management of Suicidality (CAMS). CAMS has a robust evidence base from nonrandomized and randomized clinical trial research. CAMS is designed to form a strong therapeutic alliance and to increase patient motivation to be engaged in their own suicide-specific care. The Suicide Status Form is a multipurpose clinical assessment, treatment-planning, tracking, and outcome tool that provides the essential CAMS roadmap for engaging a suicidal patient in successful treatment. This chapter features the case example of “Jon,” a multiply-deployed suicidal US Army sergeant, to illustrate how CAMS can be used as both a philosophy suicide-specific care tool as well as a flexible clinical framework for engaging and effectively treating suicidal service members in military treatment facilities.

2020 ◽  
pp. bmjmilitary-2019-001351
Author(s):  
Matt Ellington ◽  
R J Booker

Procedural sedation is defined as producing a state of reduced consciousness, where the patient is still able to respond to verbal or physical stimulus and to continuously maintain a patent airway and adequate ventilation. This can be done to facilitate treatment that would not be otherwise possible. Recent evidence, guidelines and new equipment introductions have improved the safety of procedural sedation at UK role 1 medical treatment facilities (MTFs). A role 1 MTF is defined by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization as a medical facility focusing on the provision of primary healthcare, specialised first aid, triage, resuscitation and stabilisation, and is usually staffed by a general practitioner or a general duties medical officer. This paper aims to update role 1 clinicians on the current evidence base and guidance regarding monitoring of patients during procedural sedation.


GRUPPI ◽  
2009 ◽  
pp. 107-116
Author(s):  
Chiara Andreatta

- The author illustrates a case of institutional intervention with a clinical approach, in which the setting is a significant therapeutic factor. The competence needed to build an ad hoc device for treatment - designed to satisfy specific care requirements - is the result of clinical training and the development of precise abilities, such as the following: listening and making use of individual, group and institutional emotions; restraint and empathy; technical- methodological know-how; pertinent analytic interpretation and attribution of meaning. These competences are essential tools that the author proposes to perform effective institutional interventions.Key words: setting, device, care, psychosocioanalysis, institution, clinical competence.Parole chiave: setting, dispositivo, cura, psicosocioanalisi, istituzione, competenza clinica.


2007 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 283-300 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Jobes ◽  
Melinda Moore ◽  
Stephen O'Connor

The Collaborative Assessment and Management of Suicidality (CAMS) was developed to modify clinician behaviors in how they initially identify, engage, assess, conceptualize, treatment plan, and manage suicidal outpatients. This approach integrates a range of theoretical orientations into a structured clinical format emphasizing the importance of the counselor and client working together to elucidate and understand the "functional" role of suicidal thoughts and behaviors from the client's perspective. Based on clinical research in various outpatient settings, CAMS provides mental health counselors with a novel clinical approach that is tailored to a suicidal client's idiosyncratic needs thereby insuring the effective clinical assessment, treatment, and tracking of high risk suicidal clients.


2019 ◽  
Vol 147 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. B. Mullaney ◽  
S. Rao ◽  
M. D. Salman ◽  
B. J. McCluskey ◽  
D. R. Hyatt

Abstract Throughout history, acute gastrointestinal illness (AGI) has been a significant cause of morbidity and mortality among US service members. We estimated the magnitude, distribution, risk factors and care seeking behaviour of AGI among the active duty US Army service members using a web-based survey. The survey asked about sociodemographic characteristics, dining and food procurement history and any experience of diarrhoea in the past 30 days. If respondents reported diarrhoea, additional questions about concurrent symptoms, duration of illness, medical care seeking and stool sample submission were asked. Univariable and multivariable logistic regression were used to identify the factors associated with AGI and factors associated with seeking care and submitting a stool sample. The 30-day prevalence of AGI was 18.5% (95% CI 16.66–20.25), the incidence rate was 2.24 AGI episodes per person-year (95% CI 2.04–2.49). Risk factors included a region of residence, eating at the dining facility and eating at other on-post establishments. Individuals with AGI missed 2.7–3.7 days of work, which costs approximately $ 847 451 629 in paid wages. Results indicate there are more than 1 million cases of AGI per year among US Army Soldiers, which can have a major impact on readiness. We found that care-seeking behaviours for AGI are different among US Army Service Members than the general population. Army Service Members with AGI report seeking care and having a stool sample submitted less often, especially for severe (bloody) diarrhoea. Factors associated with seeking care included rank, experiencing respiratory symptoms (sore throat, cough), experiencing vomiting and missing work for their illness. Factors associated with submitting a stool sample including experiencing more than five loose stools in 24 h and not experiencing respiratory symptoms. US Army laboratory-based surveillance under-estimates service members with both bloody and non-bloody diarrhoea. To our knowledge, this is the first study to estimate the magnitude, distribution, risk factors and care-seeking behaviour of AGI among Army members. We determined Army service members care-seeking behaviours, AGI risk factors and stool sample submission rates are different than the general population, so when estimating burden of AGI caused by specific foodborne pathogens using methods like Scallan et al. (2011), unique multipliers must be used for this subset of the population. The study legitimises not only the importance of AGI in the active duty Army population but also highlights opportunities for public health leaders to engage in simple strategies to better capture AGI impact so more modern intervention strategies can be implemented to reduce burden and indirectly improve operational readiness across the Enterprise.


Author(s):  
Megan Chesin ◽  
Barbara Stanley

In this chapter, brief and longer-term cognitive therapy (CT) approaches to intervening with suicidal individuals are reviewed. Particular focus is placed on detailing conceptualization and intervention using CT, the safety planning intervention (SPI), and mindfulness-based cognitive therapy for preventing suicidal behaviour (MBCT-S). Brief summaries of a number of other evidence-based psychosocial interventions for suicidal individuals, including the collaborative assessment and management of suicidality (CAMS), psychodynamic approaches, interpersonal psychotherapy (IPT), family-focused and multisystemic treatments (FFTs), are also provided. A summary of the evidence base supporting the safety, feasibility, and effectiveness of each psychosocial intervention targeting suicidal behaviour prevention is also given.


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