
Tintypographer
I am done as of 4-21-2023. Somewhere I am no more
- Apr 29, 2020
- 470
An article in Psychiatric Times shared a conversation with The Chief Medical Officer for the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention
From the article, the doctor highlighted her recommendations to slow the rate increases in suicide:
There may have been factors specific to 2020 at play, in light of the fact that March and April are typically the time of year when suicide rates are highest. It may have been that the early months of the pandemic from March to June, when the lockdown period was occurring, may have conferred a psychological girding of sorts with communal cohesion and feeling of being in it together that may have protected against the sudden changes in routines, employment, and sense of certainty. That said, clinicians should prioritize suicide prevention not only in the spring or summertime, but all year round! On an individual level, there a few steps clinicians can take to reduce suicide risk, including:
-Incorporate routine suicide and mental health screening/rating scales into their practice.
-Use the Safety Planning Intervention and Lethal Means Counseling as an ongoing practice with all patients who have any level of suicidal ideation or suicide risk factors.
-Become familiar with Counseling on Lethal Means, and practice this with patients during periods of increased suicide risk.
-Increase the frequency of outpatient visits or communication during periods of increased risk.
-Involve the patient's family in supportive actions to every extent possible with patient permission (for example, with helping make the home environment safe of lethal means).
-Have a referral list ready to go for CBT-, DBT- or CAMS-specific suicide risk-reducing forms of therapy.
-Learn the data related to treatments including medications and suicide prevention. You can read more here.
-Use AFSP resources to help patients and families learn more (eg, After an Attempt, Surviving a Suicide Loss, Have a #RealConvo).
-Advocate with the leadership of your health care organization to make suicide prevention a priority of the health system.
My curiosity is that the leading authority as a medical doctor in the US regarding suicide prevention outlined her most critical initiatives to slow suicide rates and no where included was "stop sanctioned suicide" or @fixthe26 parroted by @kelli
As a father of a child who took her own life and a suicide attempt survivor myself, my cause in this world of depression is to make the key problems of poor access, poorly understood and inadequate mental healthcare known to as many people as possible. It's clear the rise in suicide has been going on since well before the forums of people trying to find relief to their mental health, severe depression and suicidal ideation began. The rise in suicide is not the result of sanctioned suicide. It is a lagging indicator of a health crisis.
From the article, the doctor highlighted her recommendations to slow the rate increases in suicide:
There may have been factors specific to 2020 at play, in light of the fact that March and April are typically the time of year when suicide rates are highest. It may have been that the early months of the pandemic from March to June, when the lockdown period was occurring, may have conferred a psychological girding of sorts with communal cohesion and feeling of being in it together that may have protected against the sudden changes in routines, employment, and sense of certainty. That said, clinicians should prioritize suicide prevention not only in the spring or summertime, but all year round! On an individual level, there a few steps clinicians can take to reduce suicide risk, including:
-Incorporate routine suicide and mental health screening/rating scales into their practice.
-Use the Safety Planning Intervention and Lethal Means Counseling as an ongoing practice with all patients who have any level of suicidal ideation or suicide risk factors.
-Become familiar with Counseling on Lethal Means, and practice this with patients during periods of increased suicide risk.
-Increase the frequency of outpatient visits or communication during periods of increased risk.
-Involve the patient's family in supportive actions to every extent possible with patient permission (for example, with helping make the home environment safe of lethal means).
-Have a referral list ready to go for CBT-, DBT- or CAMS-specific suicide risk-reducing forms of therapy.
-Learn the data related to treatments including medications and suicide prevention. You can read more here.
-Use AFSP resources to help patients and families learn more (eg, After an Attempt, Surviving a Suicide Loss, Have a #RealConvo).
-Advocate with the leadership of your health care organization to make suicide prevention a priority of the health system.
My curiosity is that the leading authority as a medical doctor in the US regarding suicide prevention outlined her most critical initiatives to slow suicide rates and no where included was "stop sanctioned suicide" or @fixthe26 parroted by @kelli
As a father of a child who took her own life and a suicide attempt survivor myself, my cause in this world of depression is to make the key problems of poor access, poorly understood and inadequate mental healthcare known to as many people as possible. It's clear the rise in suicide has been going on since well before the forums of people trying to find relief to their mental health, severe depression and suicidal ideation began. The rise in suicide is not the result of sanctioned suicide. It is a lagging indicator of a health crisis.