Objective: Client suicide, used to refer to situations where a mental health practitioner (MHP) is exposed, affected, or bereaved by a client’s suicide, is known to have a profound impact on MHPs. The current study investigated (1) the short- and long-term impact of client suicide and (2) to what extent gender, years of experience, therapeutic background, and exposure to suicidality predicted impact. Methods: An international sample of 213 mental health practitioners completed an online survey on the impact of client suicide. Results and Conclusion: Overall, results indicate MHPs are significantly affected by client suicide. A two-factor model in which impact of client suicide was predicted by two latent variables, MHP Characteristics and Exposure to Suicidality, explained 43% of short-term, 69% of long-term emotional, and 60% of long-term professional impact. Whereas MHP characteristics did not significantly predict any of the three impact variables (ps >.05), Exposure to Suicidality significantly predicted all three outcome variables (ps
CITATION STYLE
Van der Hallen, R. (2023). Suicide Exposure and the Impact of Client Suicide: A Structural Equation Modeling Approach. Archives of Suicide Research, 27(2), 426–438. https://doi.org/10.1080/13811118.2021.2020190
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