Death of the suicide law: A changing standard of liability for clinicians

Author:

Syed Shariful A.12ORCID,Dixson Brigham3,Fontenele Rodrigo12,Eth Spencer45,Regan Judith36

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry Yale University School of Medicine New Haven Connecticut USA

2. VA Connecticut Health Care System West Haven Connecticut USA

3. North, Pursell & Ramos PLC Nashville Tennessee USA

4. Miami VA Health Care System Miami Florida USA

5. Department of Psychiatry University of Miami Miller School of Medicine Miami Florida USA

6. VISN 8 VA Clinical Resource Hub St. Petersburg Florida USA

Abstract

AbstractHigh rates of suicide continue to plague the modern world, with clinicians, researchers, and policymakers working urgently to ameliorate what has been recognized as a worldwide public health crisis. Under American Law, individuals‐ including health care providers, could generally not be held liable for causing the suicide of another person. This article presents a review of suicide law in the United States in the context of a recent civil case in which a physician with expertise in mental health was sued for the death of an ex‐partner who committed suicide in his home. Historical events and landmark legal cases spanning the 15th century to now are examined and presented as a narrative review to inform society and mental health clinicians a‐like towards interpreting the changing medical‐legal landscape. As modern advances in science continue to discern the critical biopsychosocial factors that contribute to the act of suicide, there is an inevitably growing concern that suicide may no longer be an incomprehensible nor irrational event as has been assumed for centuries. Thus, it may be considered that individual with expertise and qualification to treat a group of individuals at higher risk of suicide (severe mental illness) may be subject to a different standard than the average individual. This article seeks to present a complex matter where no simple or broad‐sweeping conclusions can yet be drawn, however remains a critically important matter for mental health clinicians.

Publisher

Wiley

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