Veterans Health Administration (VHA) has long known that Veterans who have recently had a suicidal crisis such as those in acute psychiatric hospitalization are at increased risk for suicide. In response, VHA developed a suicide prevention strategy and enhanced usual care (EUC) for high-risk Veterans by adding care coordination, safety plans, and access to a 24-hour crisis hotline. There has also been a broad array of innovative suicide prevention trials across VHA. However, the only intervention that has shown promise in reducing risk for suicide attempts in Veterans is Safety Planning, that has already been implemented across VHA. Despite these efforts, suicide rates following such crises have plateaued and there has been no observable reduction in risk in this population, requiring the development and testing of additional strategies that complement these already implemented approaches. Research suggests that treatments to reduce suicidal behavior may need to focus on both the motivation to live and the motivation to die to obtain optimal effects. The PI developed a revised version of Motivational Interviewing to Address Suicidal Ideation (MI-SI-R) to help Veterans resolve ambivalence about living by increasing the motivation to live, that is delivered as one-to-two in-person sessions with a telephone booster session. In a preliminary randomized controlled trial (RCT) in psychiatrically hospitalized Veterans, MI-SI-R plus EUC was associated with 50% fewer suicide attempts and 41% lower likelihood of suicidal ideation compared to EUC alone. Furthermore, post-hoc analyses suggested that MI-SI-R had a stronger impact on suicide attempt risk among those with an attempt history, but a stronger impact on suicidal ideation among those without a suicide attempt history, which requires replication. Additional research is also needed to deepen our understanding of MI-SI-R and its hypothesized mechanistic model by examining its efficacy among patients with different psychiatric disorders and its putative motivational mechanisms. We are proposing an RCT comparing MI-SI-R plus EUC (MI-SI-R+EUC) to EUC alone in a sample of 470 high- risk Veterans with recent suicidal crises from three VHA Medical Centers, with “high-risk” defined as a suicide attempt within a month or suicidal ideation > 5 on the Beck Scale for Suicidal Ideation. Half (n = 235) will be randomized to MI-SI-R+EUC (three sessions in-person, via Video Connect, or telephone) and the remaining participants (n = 235) will receive EUC alone. All participants will be asked to complete telephone follow-up assessments at 3, 6, 9, and 12-months after randomization. This will allow us to determine the efficacy of MI-SI- R+EUC in reducing risk for suicide attempts (Aim 1) and reducing overall suicidal ideation (Aim 2) when compared to EUC alone. We will also explore the possibility that MI-SI-R+EUC has a differential impact among patients with different suicide attempt histories and different psychiatric...