1 / 14

WHO DIES FROM SUICIDE? (CALIFORNIA STRATEGIC PLAN ON SUICIDE PREVENTION)

EARLY START PEI SUICIDE PREVENTION AD HOC COMMITTEE PROPOSAL Olivia Celis Carlotta Childs-Seagle Rocio Gonzalez Sam Bloom & James Cunningham. WHO DIES FROM SUICIDE? (CALIFORNIA STRATEGIC PLAN ON SUICIDE PREVENTION). 10 TH ranking cause of death in California

lynda
Télécharger la présentation

WHO DIES FROM SUICIDE? (CALIFORNIA STRATEGIC PLAN ON SUICIDE PREVENTION)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. EARLY START PEISUICIDE PREVENTION AD HOC COMMITTEE PROPOSALOlivia CelisCarlotta Childs-SeagleRocio GonzalezSam Bloom & James Cunningham

  2. WHO DIES FROM SUICIDE?(CALIFORNIA STRATEGIC PLAN ON SUICIDE PREVENTION) • 10TH ranking cause of death in California • Older adults over the age of 85 have the highest suicide rate in California • Suicide is the 3rd largest cause of death between the ages of 16 to 25 • Males are three times more likely than females to die by suicide than women • Women attempt suicide three times more than men, and are more likely to be hospitalized for self-inflicted injuries

  3. CALIFORNIA DATASUICIDE ATTEMPTS (2006) Draft California Stategic Plan on Suicide Prevention

  4. LOS ANGELES COUNTY DATASUICIDE RATE BY SA/AGE (2003)

  5. EARLY START PRINCIPLES • Coincide with statewide projects • Consistence with PEI & Early Start • Feasibility • Short start-up • Meets community needs • Leveraging • Transformation as necessary

  6. MHSOAC RECOMMENDATIONS: • Build a system of suicide prevention at State and Local levels • Provide technical assistance, resources to develop and implement suicide prevention • Increase the capacity & quality of local suicide prevention hotlines • Increase the capacity of the workforce to effectively prevent suicide

  7. Suicide Prevention Transformation: Didi Hirsch “24/7 Crisis Hotline” Increase County-wide capacity & quality of local suicide hotline (MHSOAC & CA DMH Guidelines) National Lifeline Certification Collaboration with NIMH & SAMHSA Transformed under ASIST (Columbia Univ.) 1. Prevention 2. Early Intervention

  8. Suicide Prevention Transformation: Pacific Clinics Latina Youth Program High TAY suicide SA7 Underserved community EBP – CBT & Columbia Teen Screen • Prevention • Early Intervention

  9. Suicide Prevention Expansion Suicide Prevention Specialist Teams CA DMH Early Start Guideline Recommendation: Liaison to State DMH infrastructure: Age group specialists 1. Prevention Training, Resources, Needs Assessment, Integration & Coordination of County-wide Suicide Prevention activities

  10. Suicide Prevention Expansion Health Care Partners Specialty Program (>risk co-morbidity) 60+ Suicide Rate Co-location in Primary Care Centers EBP: PROSPECT (Prevention of Suicide in Primary Care Elderly: Collaborative Trial) 2. Early Intervention

  11. Suicide Prevention Expansion Web-Based Training & Resources Partner with Educational Community Jason Flatt Act Increasing capacity of Workforce 1. Prevention Suicide Prevention Training

  12. Suicide Prevention Expansion Service Programs: • Expansion of Local Hotline to underserved & ethnic communities • Promotion & Expansion of Peer Support for survivors & bereaved • Partner with hospitals for follow-up post suicide attempt • Partner with law enforcement & first responders • 1. Prevention 2. Early Intervention

  13. Suicide PreventionEstimated Budget Transformation: “24/7 Crisis Hotline” $ 450,000 Latina Youth Program $ 375,000 Expansion of Services: DMH SP Teams $ 850,000 Health Care Partners $ 350,000 Web-based Training $ 255,000 Proposed New Services $1,050,000 TOTAL $3,330,000

  14. Thank You for Your Attention.

More Related