You have been asked to be the leader of your local medical community in a new campaign to prevent adolescent suicide. You know the US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) has released a statement regarding this subject and you want to be consistent with the recommendations in that statement. In following the new guidelines from the USPSTF, and as the leader of your local medical organization, what will be your initial counsel to your community?
Answers:
The best answer is option 4, which reflects the nuance: even without robust evidence to support universal screening, clinicians should maintain awareness of psychiatric disorders in adolescents, ask about suicidal ideation when appropriate, and facilitate referral when indicated. This balances the current lack of evidence for broad screening with the real-world clinical importance of vigilance and timely intervention.
Many examinees recall that the USPSTF recommends screening adolescents for depression (a B-grade recommendation) and assume suicide‐risk screening is equally endorsed.
The USPSTF’s “insufficient evidence” (I-statement) often gets misinterpreted as an active recommendation against any screening, rather than a neutral position that still supports clinical vigilance.
Option | What It Tests / Implies | Why It’s Wrong Here |
---|---|---|
Evidence regarding the benefits of screening adolescents for suicide risk is robust, and this evidence supports the idea of using screening tools for all adolescents… | Recall of universal public‐health screening paradigms | Contradicts the USPSTF I-statement: there is no robust evidence for universal suicide‐risk screening uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org |
Evidence regarding the possible harms of screening adolescents for suicide risk is robust, and this evidence discredits … | Understanding of potential screening harms (false positives, anxiety) | USPSTF found insufficient evidence for both benefits and harms, not robust harms alone uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org |
Evidence to determine whether it is beneficial to screen the general asymptomatic population of adolescent for suicide risks is inadequate; thus, providers need not… | Recognition of insufficient evidence for universal screening | Overstates the “I” statement by implying no adolescent should ever be screened, ignoring case finding |
Given that most adolescents who die by suicide have a psychiatric disorder… (Correct) | Clinical case‐finding focus; aligns with I-statement nuance | — |
The monetary cost of screening adolescents for suicide risk is substantial and the decision to screen must be made on a case‐by‐case basis | Health‐economics approach to screening decisions | USPSTF explicitly does not consider cost in its I-statement; cost is not part of their rationale |
USPSTF I-statement ≠ “Don’t screen” – it means universal screening in asymptomatic adolescents lacks sufficient evidence; remain vigilant and screen those with psychiatric risk factors.
This item hinges on distinguishing the nuance of an “insufficient evidence” (I) recommendation from a blanket “do not screen” stance. The distractors play on examinees’ tendencies to overinterpret “insufficient” as either fully supportive of universal screening or completely prohibitive, whereas the correct approach is targeted case finding.
A 15-year-old girl with known major depressive disorder comes for a routine follow-up. She reports feeling “slightly better,” but you haven’t asked about suicidal thoughts in three visits. According to USPSTF guidance, what is your next step?
A. “I” statement precludes any suicide screening, so defer asking.
B. Ask directly about suicidal ideation and safety planning.
C. Schedule a universal screening visit with a standardized tool only if she requests it.
D. Refer immediately to psychiatry without further questioning.
A 13-year-old boy with ADHD and recent behavioral issues is brought in by his mother, who says he’s been sleeping poorly but denies mood changes. What best aligns with USPSTF suicide‐risk guidance?
A. Perform universal questionnaire screening on all asymptomatic adolescents.
B. Inquire about suicidal thoughts given his psychiatric history.
C. No need to ask unless he expresses hopelessness.
D. Schedule screening only at annual well visits.
A 17-year-old girl presents with new onset anxiety and panic attacks. She denies suicidal thoughts spontaneously. Your best approach per USPSTF is to:
A. Skip direct suicide questioning because she denied it initially.
B. Directly ask about suicidal ideation as part of psychiatric case finding.
C. Wait until her next visit to screen universally.
D. Order laboratory tests before any mental-health screening.
During a school‐based sports physical, you see a healthy, asymptomatic 14-year-old with no psychiatric history. According to USPSTF, how should you handle suicide‐risk screening?
A. No routine screening—insufficient evidence for universal screening.
B. Mandatory standardized tool for all adolescents in primary care.
C. Only screen if family history of suicide.
D. Automatically refer to mental-health counseling before clearance.
A 16-year-old boy with no prior psychiatric history presents for acne follow-up. He seems withdrawn but doesn’t volunteer mood concerns. What do guidelines support?
A. Universal screening at acne visits only if the dermatologist requests it.
B. Defer suicide‐risk screening unless asked.
C. Observe clinical warning signs and inquire about suicidality if present.
D. Refer to psychiatry regardless of symptomatology.
Compare the potential benefits and drawbacks of using a brief validated suicide‐risk screening instrument (e.g., PHQ-9 question 9) at every adolescent well visit versus relying solely on clinician‐directed inquiry based on psychiatric history and risk factors.
This question appears in Med-Challenger Family Medicine Review with CME
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