Name
E10 - Who Cares for the Caregivers? Suicide Prevention and Collective Responsibility in Behavioral and Medical Teams
Date & Time
Friday, October 9, 2026, 11:15 AM - 11:45 AM
Location Name
Regency F (2nd Floor)
Description

Suicide risk among healthcare professionals is an urgent but often unspoken crisis affecting both behavioral health and medical providers. This session explores how workplace culture, peer awareness, and interdisciplinary collaboration can create protective systems that support clinicians before crisis occurs. Participants will learn practical strategies to recognize warning signs in colleagues, initiate difficult conversations, and foster environments where seeking help is normalized. Through discussion and case examples, attendees will leave with actionable tools to strengthen a culture of shared responsibility for clinician wellbeing.

Content Level
All Audience
Tags
Self-care/Self-management, Suicide
Session Type
Concurrent
Identify key risk factors, warning signs, and systemic contributors associated with suicide among healthcare professionals across medical and behavioral health disciplines.
Describe practical strategies for recognizing distress in colleagues and initiating supportive conversations that address suicide risk within healthcare teams.
Discuss how interdisciplinary collaboration and psychologically safe workplace cultures can strengthen suicide prevention efforts and support clinician wellbeing.

Gold, K. J., Sen, A., & Schwenk, T. L. (2013). Details on suicide among US physicians: Data from the National Violent Death Reporting System. General Hospital Psychiatry, 35(1), 45–49.

Shanafelt, T. D., Dyrbye, L. N., & West, C. P. (2017). Addressing physician burnout: The way forward. JAMA, 317(9), 901–902.

West, C. P., Dyrbye, L. N., Erwin, P. J., & Shanafelt, T. D. (2016). Interventions to prevent and reduce physician burnout: A systematic review and meta-analysis. The Lancet, 388(10057), 2272–2281.

American Foundation for Suicide Prevention. (2020). Physician and healthcare provider suicide prevention resources.

National Academy of Medicine. (2019). Taking Action Against Clinician Burnout: A Systems Approach to Professional Well-Being.