A Letter From The
Surgeon General
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Suicide is a serious public health problem. In 1996, the
year for which the most recent statistics are available, suicide was the
ninth leading cause of mortality in the United States, responsible for
nearly 31,000 deaths. This number is more than 50% higher than the number of
homicides in the United States in the same year (around 20,000 homicides in
1996).1 Many fail to realize that far more Americans die from
suicide than from homicide. Each year in the United States, approximately
500,000 people require emergency room treatment as a result of attempted
suicide.2 Suicidal behavior typically occurs in the presence of
mental or substance abuse disorders - illnesses that impose their own direct
suffering.3-5 Suicide is an enormous trauma for millions of
Americans who experience the loss of someone close to them.6 The
nation must address suicide as a significant public health problem and put
into place national strategies to prevent the loss of life and the suffering
suicide causes.
In 1996, the World Health Organization (WHO), recognizing
the growing problem of suicide worldwide, urged member nations to address
suicide. Its document, Prevention of
Suicide: Guidelines for the Formulation and Implementation of National
Strategies7, motivated the creation of an innovative
public/private partnership to seek a national strategy for the United
States. This public/private partnership included agencies in the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services, encompassing the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the Health Resources and Services
Administration (HRSA), the Indian Health Service (IHS), the National
Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), the Office of the Surgeon General, and
the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) and
the Suicide Prevention Advocacy Network (SPAN), a public grassroots advocacy
organization made up of suicide survivors (persons close to someone who
completed suicide), attempters of suicide, community activists, and health
and mental health clinicians.
An outgrowth of this collaborative effort was a jointly
sponsored national conference on suicide prevention convened in Reno,
Nevada, in October 1998. Conference participants included researchers,
health and mental health clinicians, policy makers, suicide survivors, and
community activists and leaders. They engaged in careful analysis of what is
known and unknown about suicide and its potential responsiveness to a public
health model emphasizing suicide prevention.
This Surgeon General’s Call To Action introduces a blueprint for
addressing suicide – Awareness, Intervention, and Methodology, or AIM
– an approach derived from the collaborative deliberations of the
conference participants. As a framework for suicide prevention, AIM
includes 15 key recommendations that were refined from consensus and
evidence-based findings presented at the Reno conference. Recognizing that
mental and substance abuse disorders confer the greatest risk for suicidal
behavior, these recommendations suggest an important approach to preventing
suicide and injuries from suicidal behavior by addressing the problems of
undetected and undertreated mental and substance abuse disorders in
conjunction with other public health approaches.
These recommendations and their supporting conceptual
framework are essential steps toward a comprehensive National
Strategy for Suicide Prevention. Other necessary elements will include
constructive public health policy, measurable overall objectives, ways to
monitor and evaluate progress toward these objectives, and provision of
resources for groups and agencies identified to carry out the
recommendations. The nation needs to move forward with these crucial
recommendations and support continued efforts to improve the scientific
bases of suicide prevention.
Many people, from public health leaders and mental and
substance abuse disorder health experts to community advocates and suicide
survivors, worked together in developing and proposing AIM for the American public. AIM
and its recommendations chart a course for suicide prevention action now as
well as serve as the foundation for a more comprehensive National Strategy for Suicide Prevention in the future. Together,
they represent a critical component of a broader initiative to improve the
mental health of the nation. I endorse the ongoing work necessary to
complete a National Strategy
because I believe that such a coordinated and evidence-based approach is the
best way to use our resources to prevent suicide in America.
But even the most well-considered plan accomplishes
nothing if it is not implemented. To translate AIM
into action, each of us, whether we play a role at the federal, state, or
local level, must turn these recommendations into programs best suited for
our own communities. We must act now. We cannot change the past, but
together we can shape a different future.
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David Satcher, M.D., Ph.D.Assistant Secretary for
Healthand Surgeon General
Suicide as a Public
Health Problem
On average, 85 Americans die from suicide each day.
Although more females attempt suicide than males, males are at least four
times more likely to die from suicide.1,8 Firearms are the most
common means of suicide among men and women, accounting for 59% of all
suicide deaths.1
Over time, suicide rates for the general population have
been fairly stable in the United States.9 Over the last two
decades, the suicide rate has declined from 12.1 per 100,000 in 1976 to 10.8
per 100,000 in 1996.10 However, the rates for various age, gender
and ethnic groups have changed substantially. Between 1952 and 1996, the
reported rates of suicide among adolescents and young adults nearly tripled.1,11
From 1980 to 1996, the rate of suicide among persons aged 15-19 years
increased by 14% and among persons aged 10-14 years by 100%. Among persons
aged 15-19 years, firearms-related suicides accounted for 96% of the
increase in the rate of suicide since 1980. For young people 15-24 years
old, suicide is currently the third leading cause of death, exceeded only by
unintentional injury and homicide.12 More teenagers and young
adults die from suicide than from cancer, heart disease, AIDS, birth
defects, stroke, pneumonia and influenza, and chronic lung disease combined.
During the past decade, there have also been dramatic and disturbing
increases in reports of suicide among children. Suicide is currently the
fourth leading cause of death among children between the ages of 10 and 14
years.10
Suicide remains a serious public health problem at the
other end of the age spectrum, too. Suicide rates increase with age and are
highest among white American males aged 65 years and older. Older adult
suicide victims, when compared to younger suicide victims, are more likely
to have lived alone, have been widowed, and to have had a physical illness.13,14
They are also more likely to have visited a health care professional shortly
before their suicide and thus represent a missed opportunity for
intervention.15
Other population groups in this country have specific
suicide prevention needs as well. Many communities of Native Americans and
Alaskan Natives long have had elevated suicide rates.16,17
Between 1980 and 1996, the rate of suicide among African American males aged
15-19 years increased 105% and almost 100% of the increase in this group is
attributable to the use of firearms.18
It is generally agreed that not all deaths that are
suicides are reported as such. For example, deaths classified as homicide or
accidents, where individuals may have intentionally put themselves in
harm’s way are not included in suicide rates.19-21
Compounding the tragedy of loss of life, suicide evokes
complicated and uncomfortable reactions in most of us. Too often, we blame
the victim and stigmatize the surviving family members and friends. These
reactions add to the survivors’ burden of hurt, intensify their isolation,
and shroud suicide in secrecy. Unfortunately, secrecy and silence diminish
the accuracy and amount of information available about persons who have
completed suicide— information that might help prevent other suicides.
Methodology
Developing Recommendations for a National Strategy for
Suicide Prevention
Developing and implementing a National
Strategy for Suicide Prevention should achieve a significant,
measurable, and sustained reduction in suicidal behaviors. The action steps
presented in this document were prioritized from among a variety of
recommendations developed through a public-private collaboration of
nongovernmental organizations, federal and state governmental agencies,
corporations and foundations, and public health/health/mental health
experts.
Before the Reno Conference, experts evaluated research
studies, programs, policies, and best interventions to prevent suicide among
five U.S. population groups known to be at high risk of suicide. Those
identified as being at increased risk were youth, the medically ill,
specific population groups, persons with mental and substance abuse
disorders, and the elderly. Following review of the evidence by a second
expert, the lead expert extracted recommendations for suicide prevention. In
extracting recommendations, experts were instructed to consider the
robustness of the available data; an intervention’s likelihood of reducing
suicide; its perceived suitability for implementation in the real world; and
estimates of the lead-time to put the recommendation into practice and
produce its intended effect. They were also asked to consider the ethical
implications and cultural appropriateness of each recommendation.
Those experts’ draft recommendations were brought to
the Reno conference. A broad cross section of conference participants and a
highly varied expert panel were identified to work with the recommendations
and evaluate each one. The panel and the invited conference participants
represented diverse areas of expertise and included researchers, suicide
survivors, persons who had attempted suicide, public health leaders,
community volunteers, clinicians, educators, consumers of mental health
services, and corporate/nonprofit advocates. Financial support was made
available so that socioeconomic status would not exclude panelists and
participants who wanted to contribute from attending the conference. The
Regional Health Administrators of the U.S. Public Health Service served as
facilitators in working with over 400 participants to refine recommendations
during the conference. The expert panel received over 700 written comments
from participants during the course of their deliberations.
The expert panel’s recommendations were derived from a
rigorous review of suicide and suicide prevention research. Existing suicide
research is strongest in the identification of risk factors, particularly
mental and substance abuse disorders, less developed in categorizing
protective factors, and only beginning to analyze the mutual interactions
among risk and protective factors. Some treatments for mental and substance
abuse disorders have been associated with a reduction in suicidal behaviors.22-30
Further research is needed to determine whether these benefits will occur if
treatments are offered to groups outside the small populations that were
studied.
The recommendations the panel developed include past and
current initiatives, programs, and interventions. Other recommendations
pragmatically extend findings from existing suicide and suicide prevention
research into proposed applications. Suicide prevention experts from
multiple disciplines endorsed these proposed recommendations as having the
greatest potential for effectiveness.
By the end of the conference, the expert panel had
advanced 81 recommendations for consideration for inclusion in a National Strategy for Suicide Prevention. These recommendations were
posted on the SPAN Web site to allow a period of further reflection and
public comment. The CDC developed a tool for priority ranking the 81
recommendations. Respondents from all interested sectors prioritized the
recommendations using criteria of feasibility, necessity, clarity, and
likelihood of being funded. Recommendations with the highest priority scores
and broadest support were combined and edited to serve as the essential
first steps of an action agenda for suicide prevention.
Results
AIM to Prevent Suicide
This Surgeon General’s Call to Action introduces an initial
blueprint for reducing suicide and the associated toll that mental and
substance abuse disorders take in the United States. As both evidence-based
and highly prioritized by leading experts, these 15 key recommendations
listed below should serve as a framework for immediate action. These
recommended first steps are categorized as Awareness,
Intervention, and Methodology, or AIM.
Awareness:
Appropriately broaden the public’s awareness of suicide and its risk
factors
Intervention:
Enhance services and programs, both population-based and clinical care
Methodology:
Advance the science of suicide prevention.
Awareness: Appropriately broaden the public’s awareness
of suicide and its risk factors
_ Promote
public awareness that suicide is a public health problem and, as such, many
suicides are preventable. Use information technology appropriately to make
facts about suicide and its risk factors and prevention approaches available
to the public and to health care providers.
_ Expand
awareness of and enhance resources in communities for suicide prevention
programs and mental and substance abuse disorder assessment and treatment.
_ Develop
and implement strategies to reduce the stigma associated with mental
illness, substance abuse, and suicidal behavior and with seeking help for
such problems.
Intervention: Enhance services and programs, both
population-based and clinical care
_ Extend
collaboration with and among public and private sectors to complete a National
Strategy for Suicide Prevention.
_ Improve
the ability of primary care providers to recognize and treat depression,
substance abuse, and other major mental illnesses associated with suicide
risk. Increase the referral to specialty care when appropriate.
_ Eliminate
barriers in public and private insurance programs for provision of quality
mental and substance abuse disorder treatments and create incentives to
treat patients with coexisting mental and substance abuse disorders.
_ Institute
training for all health, mental health, substance abuse and human service
professionals (including clergy, teachers, correctional workers, and social
workers) concerning suicide risk assessment and recognition, treatment,
management, and aftercare interventions.
_ Develop
and implement effective training programs for family members of those at
risk and for natural community helpers on how to recognize, respond to, and
refer people showing signs of suicide risk and associated mental and
substance abuse disorders. Natural community helpers are people such as
educators, coaches, hairdressers, and faith leaders, among others.
_ Develop
and implement safe and effective programs in educational settings for youth
that address adolescent distress, provide crisis intervention and
incorporate peer support for seeking help.
_ Enhance
community care resources by increasing the use of schools and workplaces as
access and referral points for mental and physical health services and
substance abuse treatment programs and provide support for persons who
survive the suicide of someone close to them.
_ Promote
a public/private collaboration with the media to assure that entertainment
and news coverage represent balanced and informed portrayals of suicide and
its associated risk factors including mental illness and substance abuse
disorders and approaches to prevention and treatment.
Methodology: Advance the science of suicide prevention
_ Enhance
research to understand risk and protective factors related to suicide, their
interaction, and their effects on suicide and suicidal behaviors.
Additionally, increase research on effective suicide prevention programs,
clinical treatments for suicidal individuals, and culture-specific
interventions.
_ Develop
additional scientific strategies for evaluating suicide prevention
interventions and ensure that evaluation components are included in all
suicide prevention programs.
_ Establish
mechanisms for federal, regional, and state interagency public health
collaboration toward improving monitoring systems for suicide and suicidal
behaviors and develop and promote standard terminology in these systems.
_ Encourage
the development and evaluation of new prevention technologies, including
firearm safety measures, to reduce easy access to lethal means of suicide.
Discussion
Risk and Protective Factors
Suicide risk and protective factors and their
interactions form the empirical base for suicide prevention. Risk factors
are associated with a greater potential for suicide and suicidal behavior
while protective factors are associated with reduced potential for suicide.31-33
Substantial age, gender, ethnic, and cultural variations
in suicide rates provide opportunities to understand the different roles of
risk and protective factors among these groups. Risk and protective factors
encompass genetic, neurobiological, psychological, social, and cultural
characteristics of individuals and groups and environmental factors such as
easy access to firearms.34-38 This expanding base of empirical
evidence generates promising ideas about what can be changed or modified to
prevent suicide.
Clear progress has been made in the scientific
understanding of suicide, mental and substance abuse disorders, and in
developing interventions to treat these disorders. For example, increased
understanding of brain systems regulated by chemicals called
neurotransmitters holds promise for understanding the biological
underpinnings of depression, anxiety disorders, impulsiveness, aggression,
and violent behaviors.39 Much remains to be learned, however,
about the common risk factors for mental disorders and substance abuse,
suicide and other forms of intentional violence including homicide, domestic
violence, and child abuse. Expanding the base of scientific evidence will
help in the development of more effective interventions for these harmful
behaviors.
Advances in neurobiology and the behavioral sciences and
their application in developing effective treatments for mental and
substance abuse disorders have generated much hope. Wider public
understanding of the science of the brain and behavior can reduce the stigma
associated with seeking help for mental and substance abuse disorders and
consequently may contribute to reducing the risk for suicidal behavior.
Risk FactorsUnderstanding risk factors can help dispel the myths
that suicide is a random act or results from stress alone. Some persons are
particularly vulnerable to suicide and suicidal self-injury because they
have more than one mental disorder present40, such as depression
with alcohol abuse41. They may also be very impulsive and/or
aggressive42, and use highly lethal methods to attempt suicide.
As noted above, the importance of certain risk factors and their combination
vary by age, gender, and ethnicity.
The impact of some risk factors can be reduced by
interventions (such as providing effective treatments for depressive
illness).31,43 Those risk factors that cannot be changed (such as
a previous suicide attempt) can alert others to the heightened risk of
suicide during periods of the recurrence of a mental or substance abuse
disorder, or following a significant stressful life event.31,44
Risk factors include:
_ Previous
suicide attempt
_ Mental
disorders — particularly mood disorders such asdepression and bipolar
disorder
_ Co-occurring
mental and alcohol and substance abuse disorders
_ Family
history of suicide
_ Hopelessness
_ Impulsive
and/or aggressive tendencies
_ Barriers
to accessing mental health treatment
_ Relational,
social, work, or financial loss
_ Physical
illness
_ Easy
access to lethal methods, especially guns
_ Unwillingness
to seek help because of stigma attached to mental and substance abuse
disorders and/or suicidal thoughts
_ Influence
of significant people—family members, celebrities, peers who have died by
suicide—both through direct personal contact or inappropriate media
representations
_ Cultural
and religious beliefs—for instance, the belief that suicide is a noble
resolution of a personal dilemma
_ Local
epidemics of suicide that have a contagious influence
_ Isolation,
a feeling of being cut off from other people
Some lists of warning signs for suicide have been created
in an effort to identify and increase the referral of persons at risk.
However, the warning signs given are not necessarily risk factors for
suicide and may include common behaviors among distressed persons, behaviors
that are not specific for suicide. If such lists are applied broadly, for
instance in the general classroom setting, they may be counterproductive. In
effect, indiscriminate suicide awareness efforts and overly inclusive
screening lists may promote suicide as a possible solution to ordinary
distress or suggest that suicidal thoughts and behaviors are normal
responses to stress.45 Efforts must be made to avoid normalizing,
glorifying, or dramatizing suicidal behavior, reporting how-to methods, or
describing suicide as an understandable solution to a traumatic or stressful
life event. Inappropriate approaches could potentially increase the risk for
suicidal behavior in vulnerable individuals, particularly youth.46,47
Protective FactorsProtective factors can include an
individual’s genetic or neurobiological makeup, attitudinal and behavioral
characteristics, and environmental attributes.31 Measures that
enhance resilience or protective factors are as essential as risk reduction
in preventing suicide. Positive resistance to suicide is not permanent, so
programs that support and maintain protection against suicide should be
ongoing.
Protective factors include:
_ Effective
and appropriate clinical care for mental, physical, and substance abuse
disorders
_ Easy
access to a variety of clinical interventions and support for help seeking
_ Restricted
access to highly lethal methods of suicide
_ Family
and community support
_ Support
from ongoing medical and mental health care relationships
_ Learned
skills in problem solving, conflict resolution, and nonviolent handling of
disputes
_ Cultural
and religious beliefs that discourage suicide and support self-preservation
instincts
The risk factors that lead to suicide (especially mental
and substance abuse disorders) and the protective factors that safeguard
against it form the conceptual framework for the prevention recommendations
developed and presented in this document and in the evolving National Strategy for Suicide Prevention.
Identifying and Addressing Risk
Unfortunately, it is difficult to identify particular
individuals at greatest risk for suicidal behaviors or completed suicide.
Measures to screen the general population for suicide risk lack the
precision needed to identify in advance only those people who eventually
would die by suicide. Because suicide screening in the general population
currently is not feasible, it is especially important for suicide prevention
programs to include broader approaches that benefit the whole population as
well as efforts focused on smaller, high-risk subgroups that can be
identified. Within those subgroups, a different approach to screening —
screening programs for specific disorders, like depression, that are
associated with suicide— can be used to identify and direct people to
highly effective treatments that may lower their risk of suicide.
Often, the suicide prevention efforts in place are
directed primarily at improving clinical care for the individual already
struggling with suicidal ideas or the individual requiring medical attention
for a suicide attempt. Suicide prevention also demands approaches that
reduce the likelihood of suicide before vulnerable individuals reach the
point of danger. Applying the public health approach to the problem of
suicide in the United States will maximize the benefits of efforts and
resources for suicide prevention.
The Public Health Approach
Suicide is a public health problem that requires an
evidence-based approach to prevention. In concert with the clinical medical
approach, which explores the history and health conditions that could lead
to suicide in a single individual, the public health approach focuses on
identifying and understanding patterns of suicide and suicidal behavior
throughout a group or population. The public health approach defines the
problem, identifies risk factors and causes of the problem, develops
interventions evaluated for effectiveness, and implements such interventions
widely in a variety of communities.48,49
Although this description suggests a linear progression
from the first step to the last, in reality the steps occur simultaneously
and depend on each other. For example, systems for gathering information to
define the exact nature of the suicide problem may also be useful in
evaluating programs. Similarly, information gained from program evaluation
and implementation may lead to new and promising interventions. Public
health has traditionally used this model to respond to epidemics of
infectious disease. During the past few decades, the model has also been
used to address other problems that are likewise complicated and challenging
to prevent, such as chronic disease and injury.
The Public Health Approach Applied to Suicide Prevention
Defining the ProblemThe first step includes collecting
information about incidents of suicide and suicidal behavior. It goes beyond
simple counting. Information is gathered on characteristics of the persons
involved, the circumstances of the incidents, events that may have
precipitated the act, the adequacy of support and health services received,
and the severity and cost of the injuries. This step covers the who, what,
when, where, how, and how many of the identified problem.
Identifying Causes and Protective FactorsThe second step focuses
on why. It addresses risk factors such as depression, alcohol and other drug
use, bereavement, or job loss. This step may be used to define groups of
people at higher risk for suicide. Many questions remain, however, about the
interactive matrix of risk and protective factors in suicide and suicidal
behavior and, more importantly, how this interaction can be modified.
Developing and Testing InterventionsThe next step involves
developing approaches to address the causes and risk factors that have been
identified. Testing the effectiveness of each approach is a critical part of
this step to ensure that strategies are safe, ethical, and feasible. Pilot
testing, which may reveal differences among particular age, gender, ethnic
and cultural groups, can help determine for whom a suicide prevention
strategy is best fitted.
Implementing InterventionsThe final step is to implement
interventions that have demonstrated effectiveness in preventing suicide and
suicidal behavior. Implementation requires data collection as a means to
continue evaluating effectiveness of an intervention. This is essential
because an intervention that has been found effective in a clinical trial or
academic study may have different outcomes in other settings. Ongoing
evaluation builds the evidence base for refining and extending effective
suicide prevention programs. Determination of an intervention’s
cost-effectiveness is another important component of this step. This ensures
that limited resources can be used to achieve the greatest benefit.
As interventions for preventing suicide are developed and
implemented, communities must consider several key factors. Interventions
have a much greater likelihood of success if they involve a variety of
services and providers. This requires community leaders to build effective
coalitions across traditionally separate sectors, such as the health care
delivery system, the mental health system, faith communities, schools,
social services, civic groups, and the public health system. Interventions
must be adapted to support and reflect the experience of survivors and
specific community values, cultures, and standards. They must also be
designed to benefit from multi-ethnic and culturally diverse participation
from all segments of the community.
As it evolves, America’s National
Strategy for Suicide Prevention must recognize and affirm the value,
dignity, and importance of each person. Everyone concerned with suicide
prevention shares the responsibility to help change and eliminate the
societal conditions and attitudes that often contribute to suicide.
Individuals, communities, organizations, and leaders at all levels should
collaborate in promoting suicide prevention. Final development of a National Strategy for Suicide Prevention and the success of these
essential action steps ultimately rest with individuals and communities and
institutions and policy makers across the United States.
Implementing AIM as an Action Agenda in Communities
As states and local communities apply the public health
approach to AIM recommendations,
they must consider both population-based and clinical care initiatives.
Their first step is to define and to describe the problem of suicide and its
associated risk factors locally and measure their magnitude. Next, causes of
the conditions found must be identified. Then, community interventions must
be designed to address the identified needs through attention to the causes
revealed. Evaluating project effectiveness provides guidance for refining
the intervention and expanding benefits to other settings. The following
hypothetical descriptions of community suicide prevention activities have
been created to illustrate applied public health and clinical management
prevention models.
YouthRecognizing the state’s increasing rates of substance
abuse and suicide among youth, the state public health director in
consultation with the Regional Health Administrator brought together
concerned representatives to form a state youth suicide, substance abuse and
depression prevention coalition. The coalition members reflected many
sectors in the community including suicide survivors, educators, social
service agencies, the faith community, businesses, the state cooperative
extension programs (4-H), school psychologists, child psychiatrists, the
PTA, substance abuse treatment counselors, public officials, and the
juvenile justice system. The coalition also established a youth advisory
board.
After collecting detailed information on the dimensions
of youth substance abuse, depression and suicide in the state and
identifying how few school systems had screening, referral, and crisis
plans, the coalition formed a multidisciplinary study committee to develop a
model suicide prevention plan. A broad array of public and professional
organizations in the state studied and endorsed the model plan. A corporate
partner from the business community provided a grant to distribute the model
plan along with a curriculum guide for natural helpers to identify high-risk
youth. As school districts adapted the plan and implemented it locally,
followup surveys were conducted to determine patterns of use, satisfaction
with the model plan and guide, and impact on substance abuse, depression and
suicidal behaviors in communities statewide. Based on evidence collected
from the evaluations, the model plan was revised to include more guidance on
working with the media to de-sensationalize coverage of suicide, and promote
abstinence from substance use as well as encourage youth to seek treatment
for both substance abuse and depression.
The ElderlyThe public health approach has revealed that suicide
rates are highest among the elderly and that most elderly suicide victims
are seen by their primary care provider within a few weeks of their suicide
and are experiencing a first episode of mild to moderate depression.
Recognizing that clinical depression is a highly treatable illness, but
treatment has not yet been adequately provided in primary care settings, a
state with a large elderly population brought together a group of health
professionals and community advocates. Together they devised and supported a
pilot program to follow depression screening in the primary care setting
with the addition of an on-site nurse or social worker specializing in
depression services. These on-site specialists ensured that those elderly
patients who screened positive for depression received depression treatment
and follow up from the physician and assessed patient progress so that
ongoing treatments could be adjusted to increase their effectiveness.
Outcomes for patients in the pilot project were compared to those patients
receiving usual treatment in comparable primary care settings. This
evaluation provided information to fine tune the program and extend its
benefits to other primary care settings in the state.
Advancing a National Suicide Prevention Strategy
The 15 recommendations (AIM) presented in this Surgeon
General’s Call to Action propose a nationwide, collaborative
effort to reduce suicidal behaviors, and to prevent premature death due to
suicide across the life span. The conceptual framework for AIM incorporates analysis of suicide risk and protective factors and
emphasizes the benefits of effectively treating mental and substance abuse
disorders. A comprehensive National
Strategy for Suicide Prevention should include these elements along with
supportive government policy, measurable objectives for the Strategy,
means of monitoring and evaluating progress, and provision of authority and
resources to carry out the Strategy’s
recommendations.
To realize success in preventing suicide and suicidal
behaviors, collaboration must be fostered on this public health priority
across a broad spectrum of agencies, institutions, groups, and
representative individuals throughout the country. As additional elements of
a comprehensive Strategy evolve,
the public and prospective implementation partners must also sustain
awareness that improved detection and treatment of mental and substance
abuse disorders represent a primary approach to suicide prevention. These
partners must ensure the availability of evidence-based guidance for
communities to develop and refine effective suicide prevention approaches.
Likewise, as communities implement approaches to recognize and reduce risk
factors to prevent suicide, they must be aware of the dangers of
inadvertently glamorizing suicide, and remain vigilant to avoid doing so.
Ongoing review of research, policy, and program advances in suicide
prevention may expand the number of effective initiatives and interventions
for incorporation into the Strategy. Work should continue that outlines measurable objectives
for an overall Strategy, provides
mechanisms for tracking these objectives, and develops means of
communicating significant progress in preventing suicide and suicidal
self-injury.
Conclusion
Americans in communities nationwide can make a
significant difference in preventing suicide and suicidal behaviors. The
recommendations presented in AIM
provide a bluprint and call for action now. Programs and activities that are
carried out and evaluated today will generate additional recommendations for
effective suicide prevention initiatives in the future. Working together
locally, in states, and at the federal level to complete and implement a National Strategy for Suicide Prevention is an important step in
responding to the major public health problem of suicide in the United
States.
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Acknowledgements
Technical assistance and scientific consultation in the
preparation of this document was provided by the CDC, NIMH, Office of the
Surgeon General and SAMHSA. Support for its publication has been provided by
the CDC, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control. Support for the
National Conference on Suicide Prevention in Reno, Nevada, 1998, was provided
in part by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (National Center for
Injury Prevention and Control), the Health Resources and Services
Administration, the National Institute of Mental Health, and the Substance
Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (Center for Mental Health
Services).
Written by Lucy Davidson, MD, EdS; Lloyd Potter, PhD,
MPH; and Virginia Ross, PhD.
In collaboration with Virginia Trotter Betts, MSN, JD,
RN, FAAN; Alex Crosby, MD, MPH; CDR Robert DeMartino, MD; Rodney Hammond, PhD;
Kay Jamison, PhD; Jane Pearson, PhD; RADM Darrel Regier, MD, Elsie Weyrauch,
RN; and Gerald Weyrauch, MBA.
Office of the Surgeon General scientific review and
editing of this document was provided by: RADM Susan J. Blumenthal, MD, MPA.
Members of the Conference Expert Panel: Morton M.
Silverman, MD (Chairperson); Alex Crosby, MD, MPH; Laurie Flynn; Dequincy A.
Lezine; Jim Moore; Jane Pearson, PhD; Leslie Scallet, JD; David Shaffer, MD;
Scot Simpson; Susan Soule, MA; Karl F. Weyrauch, MD, MPH.