Suicide Prevention Training Outside the Mental Health Service System

Author:

Simpson Grahame1,Franke Bernie2,Gillett Lauren1

Affiliation:

1. Brain Injury Rehabilitation Unit, Liverpool Hospital, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia

2. Training and Secondary Consultation Project, McKellar Centre, Geelong, Victoria, Australia

Abstract

Abstract. The training needs of staff working in mainstream (i.e., noncrisis) health settings with client groups that have moderate levels of suicide risk have not been extensively addressed. An initiative to train rehabilitation and disability staff working in the field of traumatic brain injury (TBI) is described. A program was adapted from a generic state health department training program, and disseminated by means of established training networks within the brain injury field. Program efficacy was evaluated as the training was provided across the state of Victoria in a series of 1-day workshops. Participants (n = 86) completed two evaluation measures designed for this purpose (objective knowledge test, self-rating of knowledge and skills) on three occasions (pre- and postworkshop, 6-month follow-up). Compared to a control group of rehabilitation and disability workers who did not receive the training (n = 27), the workshop participants made significant gains in objective knowledge and reported skills, and maintained these gains at the 6-month follow-up. The Suicide Interview Response Inventory-2 ( Neimeyer & Pfeiffer, 1994 ) was administered to a subgroup of participants as a validating measure, and correlated significantly with scores from the objective knowledge test. This process may provide a template for developing more fine-grained suicide prevention strategies among other health-related at-risk groups.

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

Reference39 articles.

1. Adrian, J., Glennen, C., Howlett, K., Naunton, L. (1996). Information and training strategy to enhance access and quality of services to people with acquired brain injury. Report to the Training Steering Committee Non-Government Disability Training Unit. Melbourne: Department of Human Services

2. A population survey found an association between self-reports of traumatic brain injury and increased psychiatric symptoms

3. Suicide within 12 months of contact with mental health services: national clinical survey

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5. Silent suicide: suicide among people not in contact with mental health services

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