Abstract
Sleep and suicide risk: A perspective on integrating sleep into routine psychiatric assessment.
Suicide remains one of the leading causes of death worldwide, yet psychiatry continues to
assess risk primarily through suicidal ideation. This narrow focus overlooks a critical factor:
sleep. A growing body of evidence demonstrates that insomnia, nightmares, and circadian
disruption are consistent and potentially modifiable correlates of suicidal behavior across
various diagnoses and age groups, supported primarily by longitudinal and prospective
studies. Despite this, structured sleep assessment is seldom integrated into routine psychiatric
care, predominantly due to cultural inertia and inadequate training. This perspective
necessitates a shift: sleep assessment should be regarded alongside mood and cognition in
every evaluation of suicide risk. Brief questionnaires and targeted interventions are readily
accessible and feasible for implementation, thereby presenting concrete opportunities for
prevention. By incorporating sleep evaluation into standard practice and future predictive
models, psychiatry can advance toward more precise, actionable, and timely suicide prevention.
To continue neglecting sleep is to overlook one of the most accessible and effective
means of saving lives.