NEW ORLEANS – The patient, a 60-year-old woman who'd just tried to kill herself by overdosing on gabapentin, felt the need to make a confession. As she told a resident psychiatrist late one night at a Philadelphia crisis response center, she'd just murdered two people and buried them in her backyard. More details kept coming, including who was dead and where their bodies were.

Dr Meghan Musselman
It didn't take long for the attending physician's phone to ring as the resident sought guidance. This wasn't a typical "duty to warn" case since there was no one to warn of a threat of violence. But then what kind of case was it? As Meghan Musselman, MD, and colleagues noted in a report presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychiatric Association, the law and medical ethics didn't present a clear-cut solution to whether the patient's claim should be reported to the authorities.
"This was much more of a gray zone case than we typically see," said Musselman, of the department of psychiatry at Temple University in Philadelphia, in an interview. "If someone is threatening to harm someone, most states have statutes about what to do in that situation. The same doesn't really exist for when the crime has already happened."