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Suicide Prevention Program Santa Clara City Challenge Team January - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Suicide Prevention Program Santa Clara City Challenge Team January 9, 2019 Open Data Portal: www.sccphd.org/healthdata Source: Santa Clara County Public Health Department, 2018 Open Data Portal: www.sccphd.org/healthdata Source: Santa Clara


  1. Suicide Prevention Program Santa Clara City Challenge Team January 9, 2019

  2. Open Data Portal: www.sccphd.org/healthdata Source: Santa Clara County Public Health Department, 2018

  3. Open Data Portal: www.sccphd.org/healthdata Source: Santa Clara County Public Health Department, 2018

  4. Open Data Portal: www.sccphd.org/healthdata Source: Santa Clara County Public Health Department, 2018

  5. Source: Santa Clara County Public Health Department, 2018 https://data-sccphd.opendata.arcgis.com/

  6. CDC EpiAid report: www.sccbhd.org/suicideprevention Youth suicide rates by city of residence, 2003 − 2015 Crude Suicide Rate 95% Confidence Count per 100,000 Interval San Jose 113 4.6 3.8 5.5 Morgan Hill 13 12.7 7.3 21.8 Palo Alto 19 14.1 9.0 22.2 Sunnyvale 17 6.4 4.0 10.3 Santa Clara 14 5.1 3.0 8.5 Data Source: Vital statistics, combined years 2003-2015 Case Definition : (1) County of residence listed as Santa Clara County, (2) Death occurred in state of California, (3) Decedent 10 to 24 years of age, (4) Manner of death listed as suicide.

  7. Crude Emergency Department (ED) visit and hospitalization rate for suicide attempt/self injury † 250 137.0 per 100,000 200 Rate per 100,000 50.9 per 100,000 150 100 50 0 Palo Morgan Hill San Jose Santa Clara Alto/Stanford County ED Visit Rate Hospital Admission Rate † suicide attempt without suicidal ideation Data Source: Emergency Department Data (2005-2014), Patient Discharge Data (2003-2014) Population : (1) Patient was 10 to 24 years of age, (2) Patient was a resident of Santa Clara County, and (3) Visit/hospitalization was for suicide attempt/self-injury. Suicide attempt/self-injury was defined based on the principal or any other diagnosis coded with ICD-9 external cause of injury codes (E-codes) in the range 950.0–959.9, corresponding to suicide attempt and self-inflicted injury.

  8. Weighted prevalence of past year suicidal ideation among public high school students, 2013 − 2014 100% Weighted Prevalence 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 20% 19% 17% 17% 20% 12% 10% 0% Palo Alto Santa Gilroy East Side Morgan Mountain School District Clara Hill View, Los Altos Data Sources: California Healthy Kids Survey (2013-2014) Population : Public high school students from Santa Clara County

  9. SANTA CLARA COUNTY SUICIDE PREVENTION PROGRAM Goals Outcome Objectives Increase early Strengthen Reduce and Increase use of identification and community suicide prevent mental health support for people prevention and services thinking about suicide response systems suicide deaths and suicide attempts in Santa Clara Reduce access to Improve messaging County lethal means in media about suicide

  10. Suicide Prevention Adult Training Programs Mental Health Basic Basic Advanced QPR: Question, safeTALK ASIST First Aid Suicide to Hope Persuade, Refer (+ youth version) Recognize the warning Learn to move beyond Understand risk Learn to provide Understand a framework signs of a suicide the common tendency factors and warning suicide first aid to a for finding and exploring crisis. Learn how to to miss, dismiss, and signs for common person at risk. recovery and growth question, persuade, avoid suicide. mental health Identify key elements opportunities for clients and refer someone Apply the TALK steps: challenges and of a suicide safety plan with suicide experiences. to help. Tell, Ask, Listen, and 5-step mental health and the actions Apply a Pathway to Hope Audience: Audience: General- KeepSafe. action plan to help required to (PaTH) model for setting adult Audience: Audience: General- both youth and adults implement it. recovery goals. Format: In-class, online Format: adult in crisis. Audience: Audience: mental Audience: Audience: mental health Duration: 1-2 hrs Duration: Format: In-class Format: Audience: General- Audience: health professionals, professionals Duration: Duration: 3 hrs adult caregivers Format: In-class Format: Format: In-class Format: Format: Format: In-class Duration: 8 hrs Duration: Duration: Duration: 8 hrs Duration: Duration: 2 days To arrange a training and for information about youth trainings, please contact evelyn.quintanilla@hhs.sccgov.org, (408) 885-3723 All trainings are free and funded by the voter -approved Mental Health Services Act (Prop. 63).

  11. KOGNITO “AT-RISK” ONLINE SIMULATIONS

  12. TIERED APPROACH TO SUICIDE PREVENTION AND MENTAL HEALTH TRAININGS Tier 3 Suicide to Hope/ASIST: Mental health professionals, counselors Tier 2 QPR, Kognito: School staff, teachers Tier 1 Youth Mental Health First Aid: Parents More than Sad, Break Free from Depression: Students

  13. K-12 TOOLKIT FOR MENTAL HEALTH PROMOTION AND SUICIDE PREVENTION http://www.heardalliance.org/help http://www.heardalliance.org/help -toolkit/ toolkit/

  14. COUNTY BEHAVIORAL HEALTH RESOURCES Name Number Santa Clara County Suicide 1-855-278-4204 and Crisis Hotline Crisis Text Line Number Text RENEW to 741741 Mental Health Urgent Care (408) 885-7855 Walk-In Clinic: 871 Enborg Open everyday Court, San Jose 8am-10pm Uplift Mobile Crisis Unit (408) 379-9085 Call Center (for referral) 1-800-704-0900 911 – ask for a CIT officer

  15. Santa Clara County: What Happens After a Suicide Death? In-County notifications Death occurs External communications First responders attend to death, e.g. police, sheriff CDRT sends letter to Coroner notified; classified suicide next-of-kin (youth only) SACS notified SACS sends condolence letter inviting to SOS support group (SCC only) SP team SP sends letter of notified support/notifies community institution, if identifiable 1 7

  16. INCREASING GRIEF SUPPORT SERVICES Grief support: In-person Free and confidential, unless noted • American Foundation for Suicide Prevention • Bill Wilson Centre for Living with Dying • Camp Erin: Where Children and Teens Learn to Grieve and Heal • Hospice of the Valley • Kara • Santa Clara County Suicide Prevention Program • Santa Clara County Survivors of Suicide (SOS) Support Group • 2019: Grief support training for clinicians and peer support workers, with BWC for Living with Dying (Dr. Janet Childs)

  17. “FRIEND YOURSELF” SOCIAL MEDIA CAMPAIGN • Aim: Increase help-seeking behavior among youth ages 18-24 • Air dates: 9/10/17-1/15/18 TOTAL 3,989,069 Facebook 1,023,210 Instagram 988,311 Pandora 1,834,448 NCM (6 theaters) 94,342 Screen Vision Media 30,000 (Morgan Hill theater) Website hits 18,758 www.mentalhealthstartswith me.org 19

  18. COMMUNITY OUTREACH • Tabling: 1,610 reached in 2018 with suicide prevention and mental health resources • Partnership-building (e.g. colleges and universities, CBOs) • Volunteer program

  19. Gun Violence Restraining Orders: www.speakforsafety.org

  20. SAFE MESSAGING EFFORTS • Media monitoring and analysis • Work with media: Response team, safe messaging trainings, BHB Hero awards, interviews • “13 Reasons Why” response, www.13reasonswhytoolkit.org

  21. CITY PARTNERS FOR SUICIDE PREVENTION • Cities with suicide prevention policies: Palo Alto, Mountain View, Los Gatos, Sunnyvale, Milpitas, Morgan Hill • Project Safety Net/Palo Alto • South County Suicide Prevention Workgroup o Strengthen continuum of care/ case review team o Increase LGBTQ services o Safe messaging training o Gatekeeper trainings 23

  22. CONTACT US Mego Lien, MPH, MIA Suicide Prevention Manager Mego.Lien@hhs.sccgov.org (408) 310-1127 Evelyn Quintanilla Nhi Tran Community Outreach Specialist Suicide Prevention Associate Evelyn.Quintanilla@hhs.sccgov.org Nhi.Tran@hhs.sccgov.org (408) 885-3723 www.sccbhd.org/suicideprevention

  23. Comments & Questions

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