“…The second example reflects an over-exclusive frame, as if other symptoms and behaviors associated with near-term suicide risk, but not identified as Criterion B categories, simply do not apply as indicators of near-term risk or criteria indicative of a suicidal crisis. Examples of these near-term risk factors are: (a) recent discharge from inpatient psychiatric hospitalization (Knesper et al, 2010); (b) sleep problems (Berman, 2018; Liu et al, 2020), more broadly defined than simply that of “global insomnia” that is listed in the SCS as a manifestation of hyperarousal; (c) negative emotions and self-evaluations such as shame, embarrassment, moral injury, or humiliation that arise in relation to the perception of having done something dishonorable, immoral, or improper (Szeto et al, 2023), but do not necessarily occur in “rapid spikes” or ruminations, as suggested by the SCS; and (d) a negative or mixed reaction to the patient by the clinician-interviewer, in the context of other criteria (Motto & Bostrom, 1990).…”