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Suicide Prevention in School: Research and Emerging Best Practices

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Title: Suicide Prevention in School: Research and Emerging Best Practices


1
Suicide Prevention in School Research and
Emerging Best Practices
  • Peter A. Wyman, Ph.D.
  • University of Rochester School of Medicine and
    Dentistry
  • Department of Psychiatry
  • Center for Study and Prevention of Suicide

2
Suicidal Behavior in Adolescents
  • 2-4 of teens acutely suicidal each year
  • about 14 Suicidal Ideation
  • Few deaths (10/100,000) but many attempts and
    untreated problems
  • Most youth with psychiatric disorders not being
    treated Important role for schools,
    identification and response
  • Rural areas 2X higher suicide deaths than more
    urban areas, including in NY

3
Overview
  • No efficacious suicide prevention programs
    unlike prevention of other youth problems. Some
    promising approaches.
  • Gatekeeper Training what weve learned in 4
    years research (NIMH) in collaboration w/ county
    school district
  • Sources of Strength a Peer Leader model for
    suicide prevention (SAMHSA)
  • NY State Sources of Strength Project in rural
    areas. NYOffice of Mental Health support.

4
Gatekeeper Training
  • Gatekeeper Training at the forefront of youth
    suicide prevention in U.S.
  • Garrett Lee Smith Memorial Act 82million for
    States/Tribes(2004-07)
  • Gatekeeper training widespread but largely
    untested
  • 4-year project testing underlying assumptions of
    gatekeeper approach. Randomized Trial in a large
    school district.

5
Support
  • R34MH071189-01 (Wyman, Brown)  NIMH
  • RCT of Gatekeeper Training for Suicide Prevention
  • SM57405-01 ( Wyman, Brown) SAMHSA
  • Evaluating Success of a Gatekeeper Program in
    Linking Suicidal Students to Treatment
  • Supplement to SM57405-01 ( Wyman, Brown) SAMHSA
  • Enhancing Youth and Community Engagement in
    Suicide Prevention
  • P20MH071897-01 (Caine)  NIMH
  • Developing Center On Public Health and Population
    Interventions For The Prevention Of Suicide
  • R01-MH40859 (Brown)    NIMH NIDA  CDC
  • Methodology for Mental Health/Substance Abuse
    Prevention Early Intervention
  • SPAN-GA Developmental Support from the State of
    Georgia
  • Cobb County School District, Georgia
  • JDS Foundation (Brown, Wyman) Development of an
    Integrated Suicide Prevention Program for Rural
    and Underserved Youth

5
6
Gatekeeper Training an overview
  • Teach warning signs/risk factors for suicide
    (QPR Assist)
  • Strategies to ask about suicide engaging someone
    suicidal
  • Facilitate referral to mental health services
  • Case-Identification approach

7
Whats the Evidence for Gatekeeper Training?
  • Increased attitudes, knowledge in pre-post and
    comparison group designs (e.g., Eggert et al.,
    1997 King Smith, 2000)
  • One part of multi-component US Air Force Program
    (Knox, et al 2004)
  • No completed randomized trials modest level of
    evidence (IOM)

7
8
Research Questions for Gatekeeper Model
  • Training Impact (Who benefits?)
  • Increase Detection 3. Reduce Suicidality
  • Referral of Suicidal Youth? Through MH Services?

MH Service Utilization
Improved Mental Health
Referred
Suicidal
All Students
8
9
The Setting Cobb County,Georgia
  • 3rd largest in Georgia, NW Atlanta - 650,000
    residents
  • 110,000 students (2005)
  • 30 African American 11 Hispanic
  • Wide SES diversity- 30 low income
  • 31 growth last decade
  • African American 250
  • Hispanic 665

10
A twelve-year-old boy hangs himself after being
punished at school. A 16-year-old shoots himself
while visiting a friend. Another boy takes his
own life with a borrowed .357 Magnum. The series
of deaths in the booming suburbs of Cobb County,
just north of Atlanta, are part of a ''suicide
cluster,'' an affliction that has inexplicably
visited half a dozen U.S. communities in this
decade.
11
School-Based Wait-Listed Randomized Trial
  • System-wide crisis protocol and rapid mental
    health evaluations since 1988
  • QPR- Question, Persuade, Refer (Quinett, 1995)
  • Trained all staff starting in 2004
  • 32 Schools
  • 12 High Schools 20 Middle Schools
  • ½ received early/ ½ late, randomly assigned

12
Strengthening Collaboration w/ School District
  • Superintendent of Schools co-PI on NIMH grant
  • Bottom down and top up
  • Integration w/ current priorities staff-student
    relationships

13
QPR
In School
  • Indirect or Coded Verbal Clues
  • Im tired of life, I just cant go on.
  • My family would be better off without me.
  • Who cares if Im dead anyway.
  • I just want out.
  • I wont be around much longer.
  • Pretty soon you wont have to worry about me.

14
QQUESTIONHOW TO ASK THE SUICIDE QUESTION
  • Less Direct Approach
  • Have you been unhappy lately? Have you been
    very unhappy lately? Have you been so unhappy
    lately that youve been thinking about ending
    your life?
  • Do you ever wish you could go to sleep and never
    wakeup?

15
Gatekeeper Surveillance ModelThe Underlining
Theory
Increase Awareness
Increase Knowledge
Traditional Gatekeeper Program
Increase Attitudes Towards Taking on a Gatekeeper
Role
Increase Surveillance
Adults
Youth
15
16
Rationale for Surveillance Model
  • Students reveal warning signs of suicide (CDC,
    2004)
  • Risk factors predictable (Schaffer, 1996)
  • Suicidal youth under-identified and
    under-utilizing treatment (Gould Kramer, 2001)
  • Adults with knowledge of services connect more
    youths to treatment (Stiffman, 2002)
  • Consistent with other broad public health
    initiatives (e.g. defibrillators in community)

17
Surveillance may not be sufficient
  • Limited recognition of youth problems even
    among professionals (Burns et al., 1995 Earls,
    1989)
  • Many adults non-responsive to suicidal
    communication (Wolk-Wasserman 1986)
  • Suicide behavior more impulsive in youth (Brent,
    1999)
  • Suicidal students may not seek help - negative
    coping (Gould 2001)

18
Impact on School Staff
  • 350 of 4000 staff enrolled for longitudinal
    surveys
  • 76 staff trained w/ 1 year average follow-up
  • Knowledge, Efficacy
  • Asking Students about Suicide (QPR goal)
  • Communication
  • Wyman, Brown et al., Journal Consulting Clinical
    Psychology, 2008.

19
Significant Improvements from QPR Training on
Knowledge
20
Highly Significant Gains in Appraisals and
Awareness
21
Much Smaller Improvements in Self-Reported
Intervention Behaviors
22
Training Increased Asking Students about
Suicide for 14 of staff already asking
23
Conclusions about Impact on Staff
  • QPR increased knowledge, appraisals
  • Asking about suicide increases limited to staff
    already asking youth
  • Knowledge and attitudes not sufficient to
    increase suicide identification behaviors

24
2. Does QPR Increase Referrals for Life
Threatening Behavior (LTB)
  • Referral for Immediate Crisis Evaluation due to
    Life Threatening Behavior
  • Crisis response protocol in existence since 1988.
  • Parents called, child kept safe, including
    referral for evaluation verification child is
    safe before return to school
  • Of nearly 400 LTB referrals, all but 1 evaluated

25
Analyses of LTB
  • Examined each Life Threatening Behavior Referral
    over 2 years obtained date of referral, gender,
    race/ethnicity, grade
  • Linked to numbers of pupils in same categories
    and each time interval (48,000 students)

26
Dramatic differences in LTB referrals by grade
highest at 8th grade
27
Did QPR training increase referrals for LTB?
No overall increase in referrals Middle schools
modest effect staff trained
28
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29
Conclusions Study 2
  • Small to negligible effects of QPR training on
    LTB referrals
  • Middle Schools- modest indication of benefit only
    when training exceeds 60 of staff trained
  • Why is QPR not increasing identification and
    referral of suicidal students?

30
2,059 students surveyed in same schools Suicidal
students less likely to endorse seeking help
from adults
  • Suicidal students 1/3rd as likely to seek help
    from adults
  • If overwhelmed by life

31
Study III In same District, followed students
referred for life-threatening Crisis
  • Does referral for mental health services reduce
    suicide risk

32
Proportion Suicidal at Crisis Assessment using
standardized questions
¹ Are you currently having thoughts or urges to
harm or kill yourself? ² Have you seriously
thought about killing yourself during the last 4
weeks?
33
Referrals by Assessor 1/3rd in acute crisis
34
Use of Services and Change in Mental Health Status
  • 24.49 months (Average of 2 years) after Referral
    and Evaluation
  • 89 Youths/Parents, avg 16.7 years (M)
  • Individual interview and assessment

35
Any Service Use/Non-Use
  • Inpatient - 33.7 Outpatient - 79.1
  • Services at School - 24.7
  • Psychotropic Medication 52
  • Rates of treatment connection highly
    comparable to referral rates
  • BUT
  • 49.3 of Parents Unsure Whether Child Received
    Professional Help Needed
  • 46 Youths Did Not Get All Help Needed

36
Proportion of Youth w/ MH Problems after LTB
Referral
  • 52.6 Positive Screen for one or more Psychiatric
    Diagnosis
  • 34.1 gt 1 Diagnosis 17 Probable
  • 13.4 Suicide Attempt last year

37
Conclusions Study 3
  • Protocol highly successful in completing
    evaluations and linkage w/ services
  • After referral weaker in use of services
  • Two Year Follow-up High proportion of youths
    elevated problems 13 suicide attempt in past
    year

38
Overall Conclusions About Gatekeeper Training
  • Small/negligible effects in increasing detection
    of LTB through QPR.
  • Modest benefit to Middle Schools after most staff
    trained
  • Surveillance Model not supported
  • Suicidal students reluctance to communicate with
    adults a formidable barrier

39
Overall Conclusions
  • Prepared staff (counselors, nurses) may ask
    more students about suicide after QPR but few
    others are communicating with students about
    distress
  • Many suicidal students dont receive needed
    mental health services

40
Building a Communication Model
  • Students attitudes and behaviors -- How reduce
    codes of silence?
  • Agents of change in high schools?
  • natural resources in communities that help
    teens in crisis?
  • Soley relying on formal MH services may not be
    effective

41
Sources of Strength in Suicide Prevention
42
Sources of Strength
  • Teen Peer Leaders need training, information
    on Codes of Silence, clear message to partner
    and involve adults
  • Teens already intervening with friends, usually
    without adult knowledge
  • Teens can enhance norms about seeking help and
    coping Sources of Strength
  • Connect peers in crisis with Trusted Adults

43
Sources of Strength
Family Support
Access to Mental Health
Positive Friends
Access to Medical
Caring Adults
Spirituality
Positive Activities
Generosity/Leadership
44
Creating Youth Adult Partners
  • Codes of Silence in most teen suicides the peer
    group knows about warning signs, but dont tell
    adults
  • Peers often handle suicide by themselves, often
    very poorly
  • The highest risk teens dont approach adults for
    help
  • When teens approach adults for help they approach
    someone they already know and trust

45
Training Peer Leaders
  • Select a group of diverse teens and adult
    advisors and provide four hour training
  • Teens then follow with five action steps
  • Peers contact their named adults
  • Peers contact 5-10 friends
  • Peers to peer classroom messages
  • Peers provide Hope, Help, and Strength Messages
  • Peers celebrate, receive recognition, message to
    parents

46
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47
Sources of Strength
  • Over 5,000 teens trained in North Dakota and
    western states (Mark LoMurray, developer)
  • North Dakota had 47 reduction in teen suicides
  • Sources of Strength modest evaluation to date

48
Sources of Strength in NY
  • Combine positive benefits of staff gatekeeper
    training with Teen Peer Leader training
  • NY-OMH supporting expansion of integrated model
    into rural counties in NY
  • Linking with schools through county suicide
    prevention coalition and AFSP chapters
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