Title: Developing Comprehensive Suicide Prevention
1Developing Comprehensive Suicide Prevention
Lloyd Potter, PhD, MPH Childrens Safety Network
Suicide Prevention Resource Center Education
Development Center, Inc.
2Topics
- Title V and Suicide Prevention
- Implementing Evidence-Based Prevention
- Collaboration and Integration of Suicide
Prevention
3Title V Block Grant National Performance Measures
- Reducing suicide rates among 15-19 year olds
4State Title V Performance Measures - Maine
- The percentage of high school students (grades
9-12) who feel like they matter to people in
their community. - The percentage of elementary schools that have
developed and implemented a comprehensive
approach to the prevention of bullying in
collaboration with the Maine Injury Prevention
Program.
5State Title V Performance Measures
- Minnesota -The degree to which Title V programs
enhance statewide capacity for a public health
approach to mental health promotion and suicide
prevention for children and adolescents. - Rhode Island - Percentage of students who felt so
sad or hopeless almost every day for two weeks or
more in a row that they stopped doing some usual
activities during the past 12 months.
6Spheres of Influence Ecological perspective of
development
Society
Community
Family/Peers
Individual
7The Mental Health Intervention Spectrum for
mental disorders
Source Institute of Medicine. (1994). Reducing risks for mental disorders Frontiers for preventive intervention research.
8Evidence of effective suicide prevention
interventions
- Selective
- Life skills (promising)
- Small group skills (promising)
- Managing geriatric depression (promising)
- Indicated
- Behavioral/cognitivebehavioral strategies
(effective) - Brief psychological intervention (promising)
- Contact through letter or telephone (promising)
- Universal
- Means control (promising)
- Laws and policies (promising)
- Public health messages (insufficient)
- School-based interventions
education (insufficient) - School-based interventions
skills (promising) - Gatekeeper training (insufficient)
- Screening (insufficient)
-
Adapted from Knox, K. (2006). Interventions to
prevent suicidal behavior. In Doll et al.,
Handbook of Injury Prevention.
9SPRC Best Practices Registry www.SPRC.org
10Delivering and adapting evidence-based programs
in communities
- where the rubber meets the road
11The Whole is Greater than the Sum of the Parts
Is evidence-based programming adequate?
- Necessary, not sufficient
- Highly targeted focus of specific
prevention/promotion efforts often inadequate for
achieving mental health promotion goals - A more comprehensive and collaborative approach
is needed
12(No Transcript)
13Community Problem Solving Capacity
Collective Competence
Low
High
Anomic Communities LL
Detached Communities LH
Low
Shared Responsibility
Intentional Communities HL
Empowered Communities HH
High
Source Bowen, G.L., Martin, J.A., Mancini,
J.A. (1999) Communities in Blue for the 21st
Century Fairfax, VA Caliber Associates, (p.
8-9).
14Coalition for Planning, Collaboration, and
Integration
- Schools
- Faith community
- Community programs
- Acute/Primary care
- Mental health
- Advocacy groups
- Police and courts
- Foster care
- Child/Family protective services
15Conclusion
- Defining suicide prevention relate performance
measures can help advance efforts - There is a growing body of information about
evidence-based and best practices that states and
communities can use - Planning, collaboration, and integration at the
state and community level should drive suicide
prevention and mental health promotion
16Resources
www.SPRC.org
www.ChildrensSafetyNetwork.org
www.SPANUSA.org
www.AFSP.org
www.suicidology.org