I reside in the US and since you are US-based, I think your answers will be relevant.
1. When working in a psych hospital, are there patients who get admitted because they wanted to either seek medical assistance in dying (not Canada) either by going overseas (Europe or elsewhere), or even going to a state that offers such procedures (OR, WA, CA, VT, MT, NM, to name a few)?
2. If a patient talks about advance directives, living wills, or any similar topic that relates to end of life or medical decisions, and their GP, family doctor, mandated report, a loved one, or concerned person, etc., reports said patient to the hospital, do you admit said patient or do you (and the psych staff) screen them out and send them on their way?
3. Assuming someone who is severely physically disabled (I don't know anybody personally, but I've read stories about such), such as late stage Alzheimers, late stage ALS, quadriplegia, late stage MS, and/or other serious, but non-terminal condition, and they choose VSED, would they ever be able to do so without unwanted intervention in keeping them alive against their will?
4. Similar to question 3, do you and your staff differentiate between those who are suffering from actual physical ailments but otherwise sound of mind (even if patient expresses wanting to die) and respect that, or are they all lumped into the same category of being 'clinically depressed' or other mental illness label?
Keep in mind these are all just hypothetical questions that I have and I have personally never been voluntarily (nor involuntarily) admitted to the psych hospital nor psych ward. Knowing some of these answers may help me in the (rare) event that I find myself in a bad situation (not guarantee freedom but at least allows me more options to get out). Of course, every hospital, ward, or setting will vary but it never hurts to have extra knowledge that may/not help.