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Section 3
Threat Detection:
Predicting a Patient’s/Client's Dangerousness

Question 3 | Test | Table of Contents

OCU School of Law & County of Sacramento

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-Tumminia, C. A. & Glenn, M. A., Ph.D. (March 17, 2013). The Duty to Warn in Oklahoma: A Survey of Law Across Licensed or Certified Psychotherapists. Oklahoma City University School of Law, 93-95.

-Quinley, M., LCSW & Eldridge, C., LMFT. (July 2017). Duty to Protect (Tarasoff). County of Sacramento, Department of Health Services, 1-3.

Update
What is the Impact of Patient Violence
in the Emergency Department
on Emergency Nurses' Intention to Leave?

- Stafford, S., Avsar, P., Nugent, L., O'Connor, T., Moore, Z., Patton, D., & Watson, C. (2022). What is the impact of patient violence in the emergency department on emergency nurses' intention to leave?. Journal of nursing management, 30(6), 1852–1860.



Peer-Reviewed Journal Article References:
Barnhorst, A., & Rozel, J. S. (2021). Evaluating threats of mass shootings in the psychiatric setting. International Review of Psychiatry, 33(7), 607–616.

Dorris, L., & Murphy, A. L. (2021). No more politics over people: The role of helping professions in the prevention of mass shootings and gun-related violence. Traumatology.

Wormwood, J. B., Quigley, K. S., & Barrett, L. F. (2022). Emotion and threat detection: The roles of affect and conceptual knowledge. Emotion, 22(8), 1929–1941.

QUESTION 3
In Oklahoma, the duty to warn is not based primarily on the practitioner’s observance of explicit patient conduct, but rather on what? To select and enter your answer go to Test.