You may be considering suicide and yet not want to tell a therapist, because you fear landing in a mental hospital.
If you go to a therapist or psychiatrist and tell them you’re seriously thinking of killing yourself, that doesn’t necessarily mean you’ll be hospitalized – even if you want to be admitted. Hospitals are pretty strict these days about who they admit, and insurance companies are equally strict about covering a hospital stay. Some therapists joke that it’s harder to get into a mental hospital than Harvard University.
Who Gets Admitted to a Psychiatric Hospital for Suicide Risk
Adults
Suicidal thoughts alone aren’t usually enough to warrant psychiatric hospitalization for adults. Instead, you’d need to be in significant and immediate danger of killing yourself. This generally means you’re intent on acting on your suicidal wishes very soon or you’re unable to control your suicidal urges. Perhaps you already have a plan for how you’d kill yourself, you have whatever you need to carry out that plan, and you have some intent to follow through on that plan very soon. And, on top of all that, you don’t want to try to stay safe.
If so, then yes, hospitalization would almost certainly be necessary. If you don’t consent to be hospitalized (that is, you won’t voluntarily admit yourself), then you might be committed to a hospital. This should an absolute last resort, but it can happen if someone’s suicide seems imminent.
People get admitted to a psychiatric hospital when suicidal danger is extreme because serious suicidal intent is almost always temporary. Consider that even among people who attempt suicide and survive, more than 90% do not go on to die by suicide.
So, if you’re thinking of killing yourself but don’t intend to act on those thoughts any time soon, then a mental health professional shouldn’t try to have you hospitalized. Instead, they should work to understand your reasons for wanting to die, to help you feel better, to increase your hope and reasons for living, and to build up your coping skills. (I say “should,” because unfortunately some therapists and doctors overreact. Here are ways to try to avoid a therapist who panics.)
Children and Adolescents
At many psychiatric hospitals, the standards for hospital admission tend to be more relaxed for children and adolescents. The younger a person is, the more alarming it can be that they consider suicide. And adolescents tend to be more impulsive than adults. So what I wrote above about strict criteria for hospitalization may not apply as much to young patients, because of the extra caution that they warrant.
If You Do Need Psychiatric Hospitalization for Suicide Risk…
What are your fears of being hospitalized? Would you really rather die than go to a psychiatric hospital? If so, why?

Perhaps you fear being locked away for a long time. It might help you to know that, on average, people admitted to a mental hospital with suicidal thoughts or behavior don’t stay more than a few days. Once upon a time, a great deal of patients did remain hospitalized for months and even years. Those days ended in the 1990s, when it became apparent that many hospitals were keeping patients longer than necessary for the sole purpose of collecting insurance money.
Perhaps you think mental hospitals are like the ones in One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest or other Hollywood movies. But these days, hospitals don’t use straitjackets. In fact, they’re not supposed to use restraints at all unless a patient is out of control and potentially violent. There are no bars on the windows unless it is a very old building. And nobody is forced to take “shock therapy,” more technically called electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). (Some people choose to receive ECT. It is a much safer, more humane procedure than it used to be, though it still can have dangerous side effects.)
What Happens If You are Admitted to a Psychiatric Hospital for Suicide Risk
There are some important things to know about what happens in a psychiatric hospital. If you are admitted, a nurse or therapist will interview you about your problems, thoughts and feelings, and symptoms. You’ll be asked to turn over anything that you could use to try to hurt or kill yourself. This includes things like shoelaces, sharp items like razor blades (called “sharps”), and belts. You might be examined without your clothes on, to ensure you aren’t hiding any weapons or pills.
During your stay, you’ll likely be evaluated to see if medication might help you. Depending on the hospital, you may participate in individual and group psychotherapy. You may have a room to yourself, or you may share. You probably won’t be able to keep your phone with you at all times.
There are definitely things that are scary about being in a psychiatric hospital. I’m not going to sugarcoat it: Bad things can happen in psych hospitals. For some people, hospitalization appears to make them feel worse than they did before they were admitted.
Even if nothing outright awful happens to you in a psych hospital, everyday aspects can be hard to deal with. Staying with strangers, some of whom may have more serious problems than you, is frightening. Just as happens in any hospital, you don’t have much privacy. Being searched can be unsettling, even traumatic for somebody who’s been sexually abused in the past.
The unit is locked, and that can feel confining. You can’t come and go as you please. If you’re very dangerous to yourself, you might have someone who shadows you, watching you even when you’re using the bathroom.
All these measures, while unpleasant, are intended to keep you safe. Suicides occur even in psychiatric hospitals, so every effort is made to protect you from killing yourself.
Someday, even if it’s hard to imagine now, you may even be thankful that you were protected in this way.
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Copyright 2013 Stacey Freedenthal, PhD, LCSW, All Rights Reserved. Written for Speaking of Suicide. Photos purchased from Fotolia.com, except where noted.
Never seen something further from the truth. I was just generally a dark person. But I never said a thing about suicide ever. Parents called to have me evaluated because I was socially withdrawn. I was admitted TWICE in 3 weeks for suicidal ideation, because I was sleeping alot and quiet and withdrawn… I’ll tell you this, its been 10 years since that experience. I am still traumatized, I multiple times a week find myself shaking thinking people are coming to get me to put me back in. I have horrid vivid flashbacks. I recall abuse, being dehumanized, and being gaslit constantly. I haven’t been able to hold a job ever since and I can’t even handle relationships of any kind. I have no friends, I abandoned my entire family and went totally off the grid. I am suicidal nowadays and its solely because that event feels like it stole who I was from me. I have never felt happy since that day, I just rot alone at home everyday and cry. My whole life changed that day, I’ll NEVER be myself again.
Life is a reality game. When you’re tired of playing a game, you quit. I have terminal cancer which took away my ability to walk last week. I will die soon and have no regrets. When that day comes, either voluntarily or naturally, I will be content. My dad, two brothers, grandmother, and best friend all quit playing voluntarily — and I was beside each of them. My last thoughts on life: earn the appreciation of honest critics, endure the betrayal of false friends, always look for the best in others, and leave the world a better place by knowing that one life has breathed easier because you lived here.
Yes I, and many others, are with you on the trauma we have been forced to endure like this.
I’m looking into this for my partner and I’m glad I did because I feel if he experienced this it would be traumatic and cause his suicidal thoughts to get worse as an SA survivor.
Trust me, it will be traumatic
I will end up in a psych ward if I am ever prescribed psychiatric medication of any sort. It’s a catch-22, isn’t it?
Hi, I’m 12 and I have sh since I was 10 things are getting really hard for me and I’ve already attempted 6 times. I don’t know whether I should tell my parents what I’m going through as I want to get help and I know that in the current situation I’m in I can’t receive the correct help. Some of my friends are being admitted and I don’t know whether to talk to them because I have had su!c!d4l thoughts for a long time and things are just getting worse
Bro literally same, I’ve been sh since since I was 8 (Not stating my age but I’m a teenager)
like me personally I totally get it, ive attempted 9 times and I always feel guilty about it afterwards. My advice, it really all depends on how ur parents are and as distressing as it is, if you tell them they’ll either overect, undereact, get mad at you or say your faking for attention. I was abused most my life and I never really was close with my parents becausee of that so if you do have good parents who you think will support you, tell them. Honestly if you have a best friend you trust, TELL THEM FIRST. as of right now i cant promise things’ll get better, but i hope things dont get worse <3
Good luck Zach, Hang in there buddy.
Tiago,
This is great advice, and thanks for sharing it with someone who needs to hear it — not only Zach, but whoever else comes upon your words.
I’m sorry you’ve experienced so much hurt and challenges, and so young, that you’ve attempted suicide nine times. I hope things get better for you. You can always call 988 to talk with someone, or use one of the other free resources I list here to get help by phone, text, email, or chat.
Thanks for sharing here!
Even we are have just a law which is more or less for psychotic people, after some other kinds of bad experiences (actually there were never really good experiences and BDI gave me very interesting isnight), I clearly state to potential therapist that in case I am suicidal she or he will be the last person to know, of course, if they ever find out why I have stopped coming. Along with few other my boundaries, one potential therapist told me two things: a) things I had told her about my boundaries are things which usually therapists say to clients, not vice versa (punctuality etc); b) that my setting of boundaries in such way had excluded her from therapy with me.
We all born alone and usually die alone, some of us are alone and lonely whole life. Why suicide should be different? I know, because of therapist’s discomfort and professional image “none of my clients killed themselves, ever”.
Thank you for explaining why people, especially with chronic suicidality should never discuss that with their therapists and deny any thought about that. And in such atmosphere, they can as well save money for such bogus therapy which is, by the way, very bogus enterprise.