Half in Love With Death presents a new way for therapists to manage chronically suicidal patients, an incredibly challenging task for clinicians. Author Joel Paris suggests an approach that defies conventional wisdom about whether suicide can be predicted or prevented. He asserts that managing chronically suicidal patients begins with tolerating suicidality, understanding the inner world of patients, avoiding repeated hospitalisations, and focusing on life situations that maintain suicidal ideas and behaviours.
Key Features
- Distinctions among various types of suicidality
- The inner world of the chronically suicidal patient, with a particular focus on pain, emptiness, and hopelessness
- The relationship between chronic suicidality and personality disorders, especially the category of borderline personality
- The effectiveness of psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy for chronically suicidal patients
- The risks of litigation in managing this patient population
Additional Information
Each chapter in the book develops a theoretical perspective based on empirical data, and many are illustrated by clinical examples. This volume is a crucially important resource for clinicians who treat chronically suicidal patients, as it fills a gap in existing literature and provides enlightened guidelines that stem from a large body of research in the field.