1 / 32

THE IMPACT OF SUICIDE : A Workshop for First Responders

THE IMPACT OF SUICIDE : A Workshop for First Responders. John R. Jordan, Ph.D . Pawtucket, RI Wellesley, MA Jjordan50@aol.com. Presentation Overview. Suicide “101” Overview of Risk Factors Warning Signs Prevention - Organizational Intervention - “How Can I Help?”

meryle
Download Presentation

THE IMPACT OF SUICIDE : A Workshop for First Responders

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. THE IMPACT OF SUICIDE:A Workshop for First Responders John R. Jordan, Ph.D. Pawtucket, RI Wellesley, MA Jjordan50@aol.com

  2. Presentation Overview • Suicide “101” • Overview of Risk Factors • Warning Signs • Prevention - Organizational • Intervention - “How Can I Help?” • Postvention – “If the Worst Happens”

  3. Suicide 101 • 10th Leading Cause of Death • 38,000 / year in U.S. • 800,000 attempts/ year in U.S. • Rates Rise with Age • Males Complete about 4 Times as Often as Females • 90% Have Diagnosable Psychiatric Disorder • Co-morbidity • Elderly Caucasian Males Generally have the Highest Rates • Middle-aged Men have the Highest Numbers

  4. Suicide as the “Perfect Storm” • Genetic Factors • Biological Factors • Personality • Past Experience • Life Stressors • Isolation • Social Issues • Opportunity/ Access to Means

  5. Overview of General Risk Factors • Previous Attempts • Especially multiple attempts • Presence of Psychiatric Disorder • Depression • Bipolar disorder • PTSD • Substance abuse • Also • Anxiety disorders, schizophrenia, eating disorders, possibly complicated grief

  6. Overview of General Risk Factors • Presence of Psychiatric Disorder • What is Depression? • Depressed mood – “Black mood & black thoughts” • Sleep disorder • Loss of appetite, energy, libido • Irritability • Trouble concentrating, making decisions • Anhedonia • Irrational guilt, thoughts of suicide & death • Withdrawal & isolation

  7. Overview of General Risk Factors • What is Trauma Response & PTSD? • Exposure to a threatening traumatic event • Elicitation of the “emergency” (fight, flight, freeze) response • Rage – (fight) • Panic/avoidance – (flight) • Numbness/shut-down – (freeze) • Intrusive reliving • Avoidance • Autonomic arousal - Hyper-arousal, hyper-focusing, hyper-vigilance • “Altered state of consciousness” • Hopelessness

  8. Overview of General Risk Factors • Exposure to Suicide • Esp. family hx. • Isolation • Trauma History • Substance Abuse • Alcohol a “suicidogenic” drug?

  9. Overview of General Risk FactorsInterpersonal Model - Joiner • Perceived Burdensomeness • Perceived Lack Of Belonging • Access to Means

  10. Warning Signs of Imminent Risk • Suicidal Ideation • Frequency, intensity, duration • Resolved Plans • Plan – lethality, specificity, practicality (access to means) • Enactment of the plan - rehearsal • Dysregulation • Sleep, eating, weight-loss, lack of self-care • “3 A’s” - Agitation/ Anxiety/ Anger • Intoxication • Leave-taking • Closing one’s business • Saying goodbye

  11. Warning Signs of Imminent Risk – Thinking Associated with Suicidal Ideation • Unlovability/ Worthlessness • “I don’t belong” & “I don’t deserve to live” • Helplessness • “I cannot solve this” • Distress Tolerance Limit • “I cannot stand the pain anymore” • Perceived Burdensomeness • “They will be better off without me” • Core Issue = Hopelessness – “Hopelessness Kills!”

  12. Warning Signs of Imminent Risk • Preparation & Rehearsal (Taking Action) • Seeking access to means • Reckless behavior • Rehearsing self-injury behavior • Direct Communication of Wish to Die/ Intent to End One’s Life • Wish to die – to be dead • Fore-shortened future • Overt suicide threat

  13. Warning Signs of Imminent Risk: A Mnemonic • IS PATH WARM • Ideation • Substance Abuse • Purposelessness • Anxiety • Trapped • Hopelessness • Withdrawing • Anger • Recklessness • Mood Changes

  14. Prevention - Organizational

  15. Prevention - Social & Cultural Barriers to Prevention • Failure to recognize depression, PTSD • Fear and ignorance about psychiatric disorder and suicidality • Taboo about asking about suicide • “John Wayne” – Not asking for help • “Why is physical self-care is for real men, but psychological self-care for wimps?” • Lack of services

  16. U.S. Air Force Program • Goals: • Promoting awareness of the range of risk factors related to suicide • Educating the community regarding available mental-health services • Reducing the stigma related to help-seeking behavior

  17. U.S. Air Force Program - Method • Community Education • Intensive education of commanders & enlisted personnel about risk factors, warning signs, and referral procedures • Risk Reduction • CISM after traumatic events (including suicide) • Assessment of personnel in legal trouble • “Buddy care” system and training

  18. U.S. Air Force Program - Method • Improvement of delivery system • Coordination across programs and providers • Promote help-seeking behavior • Increase confidentiality after seeking help

  19. U.S. Air Force Program - Results

  20. U.S. Air Force Program - Results

  21. SUMMARY - General Principles of Prevention Programs • Buy-in Of Key Leadership in the Community • Destigmatization Of Psychiatric Disorder & Suicide • Raising Awareness Of Risk And Warning Signs • Prescribing Appropriate Response to Risk • Screening, Detection, and Outreach to At-risk Individuals • Facilitating Help-seeking & Access to Services • Appropriate Follow-through With Services • Lowering General Risk Factors And Increasing Protective Factors (e.g. - Social Connection)

  22. Intervention

  23. Intervention – “How Can I Help” • Know the Warning Signs • When in Doubt - ASK! • “How bad are you feeling?” • “Do you wish you were dead?” • “Are you thinking about killing yourself/ suicide?” • “How strong are those thoughts/feelings?” • “Do you think about a plan?” • “Have you done anything to put that plan into effect?” • “Have you tried to kill yourself before? • “Let’s get you some help?”

  24. Intervention – “How Can I Help” • Express Concern & Support • Don’t challenge • Encourage and Facilitate Getting Help • Follow-Up

  25. National Suicide Prevention Hotline • For suicidal individuals • For family & friends who are concerned • 1-800-273-TALK (1-800-273-8255)

  26. Postvention

  27. Grief After Suicide: Prominent Themes For Survivors • WHY? - Making Sense of the Death • RESPONSIBILITY - Guilt & Blame • SOCIAL DISRUPTION - Isolation • SHAME - Stigma • ANGER - Rejection & Abandonment

  28. Grief After Suicide: Prominent Themes For Survivors • TRAUMA - Shock & Horror • RELIEF - The End Of Suffering • SUICIDALITY – Why Go On? • SORROW – Grief & Yearning

  29. In the Immediate Aftermath:Helping New Survivors • Express Condolences • Support • Listen • EMPATHIZE - don’t judge, offer explanations, or platitudes • Take Your Time • Explain • What you going to do (and why) • What you are doing • What you have done • Watch Your Non-verbal Communication • Tone of voice – anger, disapproval, icy detachment • Recognize Shock/Trauma in New Survivors • Fight, Flight, or Freeze • Cognitive Processing Offline – Confusion

  30. In the Immediate Aftermath:Helping New Survivors • Offer Help • Help person think of “next steps” • Make calls • Make Referrals - Samaritans Grief Support Services • Boston - 877-870-4673 • Merrimack Valley - 866-912-4673 • Pay Attention to People Who Appear to Be at Risk • Unable to contain themselves • Threats against self or others • Using substances • People who are distraught and without good support

  31. Postvention Advice for Yourself After a Suicide • Practice Self-Care • Check on Each Other • Set your grudges aside • Ask how you can help • Talk About It, Call It What It Is • Educate Yourself About Psychiatric Disorder, Suicide, & Grief • Remember the “Perfect Storm” • Accept the limitations on what we can do • You accept that for medical incidents – accept that for psychiatric disorders and suicide – not all can be prevented

  32. Wrap-Up • Questions? • Comments? • Discussion?

More Related