To the Editor: Drs. Large and Nielssen dispute a claim in the introduction of our article. We wrote that studies of risk factors predicting suicide consistently suggest that suicidal ideation and a history of suicide attempt are among the most salient risk factors for suicide, and we provide four citations summarizing the relationships of attempts and ideation to suicide. The first citation does not refer to an association between ideation and suicide but between attempts and suicide (1). The fourth shows a relationship between ideation and attempts (2). Our second and third citations refer to studies with the Scale for Suicidal Ideation. As shown by Beck et al. (3), worst point suicidal ideation as indicated by the total score of 19 items predicted subsequent deaths by suicide. Brown et al. (4) reported that current suicidal ideation as measured by the total score on the Scale for Suicide Ideation contributed “unique risk estimates of eventual suicide.” Although not all studies agree, many large studies show that suicidal ideation predicts both suicide and suicide attempts (5, 6). Although the association between suicidal ideation and suicidal behavior is modest, we know of no other risk factors that are stronger, with the possible exception of impulsivity/aggression (see Oquendo et al. [7] for a review of the prospective literature), that may be more important at a younger age range. Furthermore, since our paper was published, Gibbons et al. (8) reported that the antisuicidal effect of antidepressants such as fluoxetine and venlafaxine in adults is mediated through amelioration of depression severity. This means that even though suicidal ideation may be a modest predictor of risk in adults, it is important to monitor because it is also a modifiable risk factor.