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Join Mary & Victor Ojakian on October 14, 2009 for a suicide prevention workshop at Evergreen Valley College. Learn about suicide risks, warning signs, and how to help someone with suicide ideation. Discover available help and resources. Don't miss this important event.
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Suicide Prevention WorkshopEvergreen Valley College October 14, 2009 1 Mary & Victor Ojakian October 14, 2009
Suicide Prevention Workshop Evergreen Valley College Agenda • Topics • Basic Information • Suicide Risks, Warning Signs, and Protective Factors • Myths About Suicide Prevention • Helping Someone With Suicide Ideation • Suicide “Survivors” • Available Help / Resources • Some Websites • Ending Remark • Contact 2 Mary & Victor Ojakian October 14, 2009
Suicide Prevention Workshop Evergreen Valley College Suicide Prevention Basic Information • Suicide: a significant national, public health crisis (US Surgeon General, 1999) • Limited public awareness, understanding, or conversation: Stigma on Steroids (SoS) • An underlying mental health need, especially mood disorders, schizophrenia, anxiety disorders, and borderline personality disorders. • No gene identified, though generic cause • No medication treatment, though lithium and clozapine are effective • Some best practice treatments: therapy, including Cognitive and Dialectic Behavior Therapy 3 Mary & Victor Ojakian October 14, 2009
Suicide Prevention Workshop Evergreen Valley College Basic Information • Some statistics on death by suicide: • Every sixteen (16) minutes an American dies • 32,000 Americans die annually • 4,000 deceased below the age of 24 • 10 to 20 times more Americans attempt suicide – 520,000 to 720,000 attempts • 3,300 Californians die annually • Increase rate of suicide by young people since 2004 • For more information see: http://www.sprc.org/stateinformation/PDF/statedatasheets/sprc_national_data.pdf 4 Mary & Victor Ojakian October 14, 2009
Suicide Prevention Workshop Evergreen Valley College Basic Information, continued • Suicide data in Santa Clara County: • Between 100 to 160 deaths annually • Rate: 6.7 per 100,000 (low rate for California counties) • Attempts range from 600 to 900 annually • Suicidal ideation: about 3,000 people annually (Santa Clara County Suicide and Crisis Hotline data) 5 Mary & Victor Ojakian October 14, 2009
West Valley College: National College Health Assessment (NCHA) – Spring 2007 • Factors Impacting Academic Performance: • Stress 32.2% • Sleep Difficulties 26.1 • Cold/Flu/Sore Throat 23.6 • Concern for Troubled Friend or Family Member 21.3 • Depression/Anxiety Disorder/Seasonal Affective Disorder 15.6 • Relationship Difficulty 14.1 • Internet Use/ Computer Games 13.3 • Death of friend or Family Member 12.0 • Attention Deficit Disorder 11.4 • Sinus Infection/Ear Infection /Bronchitis/Strep Throat 9.6 • Learning Disability 8.2 • Alcohol Use 6.0 • Injury 5.2 • Allergies 5.0 • Drug Use 4.1 • Chronic Illness 3.9 • Eating Disorder/Problem 3.0 • Chronic Pain 2.4 Mary & Victor Ojakian October 14, 2009
Suicide Prevention Workshop Evergreen Valley College Quote • “It was simply the end of what I could bear, the last afternoon of having to imagine waking up the next morning only to start over again with a thick mind and black imaginings. It was the final outcome of a bad disease, a disease it seemed to me I would never get the better of. No amount of love from or for other people – and there was a lot – could help. No advantage of a caring family and fabulous job was enough to overcome the pain and hopelessness I felt; no passionate or romantic love, however strong, could make a difference. Nothing alive and warm could make its way in through my carapace. I knew my life to be a shambles, and I believed – incontestably – that my family, friends, and patients would be better off without me. There wasn’t much of me left anymore anyway, and I thought my death would free up the wasted energies and well-meant efforts that were being wasted in my behalf.” • Kay Redfield Jamison, Night Falls Fast (p 290 – 291), about her suicide attempt at age 28 Mary & Victor Ojakian October 14, 2009
Suicide Prevention Workshop Evergreen Valley College Suicide Risk Factors • Be aware of factors (risks) that make a person more vulnerable: • Hopelessness • Major mental health disorders (mostly major depression) • Alcohol and other substance abuse disorders • Previous suicide attempt(s) • Easy access to lethal means • Local clusters of suicides (contagion) • Lack of social support and sense of isolation • Stigma associated with help-seeking behavior • Trauma and childhood abuse • Media exposure to suicide and the influence of high profile death(s) by suicide • Additional information at: http://www.sprc.org/library/srisk.pdf • Source: Suicide Prevention Resource Center 8 Mary & Victor Ojakian October 14, 2009
Suicide Prevention Workshop Evergreen Valley College Suicide Warning Signs • There are behaviors (warning signs) that cause concern: • Threatening to hurt or kill themselves • Seeking a method (means) • Talking or writing about death, dying, or suicide • Feelings of hopelessness • Showing rage or anger • Acting reckless or doing risky activities • Trapped feeling • Excess alcohol or drugs use • Withdrawn behavior and sleeping problems • Dramatic mood changes • Expressing no reason for living • Source: National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) 9 Mary & Victor Ojakian October 14, 2009
Suicide Prevention Workshop Evergreen Valley College Suicide Prevention Actions and Protective Factors • There are actions (protective factors) that can help prevent a suicide: • Effective clinical care • Easy access to clinical interventions and support • Restrict access to lethal methods (means) • Strong family and community support • Ongoing medical and mental health care • Developing skills to avoid risky behaviors • Supportive cultural and religious beliefs • Additional information at: http://www.sprc.org/library/srisk.pdf • Source: Suicide Prevention Resource Center 10 Mary & Victor Ojakian October 14, 2009
Suicide Prevention Workshop Evergreen Valley College Myths About Suicide Prevention • Myth: People who talk about suicide do not commit suicide. • Fact: Most people who commit suicide have talked about or given definite warning signs of their suicidal intentions. • Myth: Suicide happens without warning. • Fact: There are almost always warning signs, but others are often unaware of the significance of the warnings or unsure about what to do. • Myth: Suicidal people are fully intent on dying. Nothing others do or say can help. • Fact: Suicide is preventable. Most suicidal people desperately want to live; they are just unable to see alternatives to their problems. • Reference: American Association of Suicidology 11 Mary & Victor Ojakian October 14, 2009
Suicide Prevention Workshop Evergreen Valley College Myths About Suicide Prevention • Myth: Once someone is suicidal, they are suicidal forever. • Fact: Most suicidal people are suicidal for only limited periods of time. However, someone who has made an attempt is at increased risk for future attempts. • Myth: Suicide strikes most often among the rich, or conversely, among the poor. • Fact: Suicide cuts across social and economic boundaries. • The San Francisco Suicide Prevention Crisis Line quiz: http://www.sfsuicide.org/html/quiz.html • Reference: American Association of Suicidology 12 Mary & Victor Ojakian October 14, 2009
Suicide Prevention Workshop Evergreen Valley College Helping Someone With Suicide Ideation • What training and knowledge would help to prevent a suicide: • Gatekeeper training: QPR – Question, Persuade, Refer • Mental Health First Aid • Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) – for first responders • See SPRC for best practices: http://www.sprc.org/featured_resources/bpr/index.asp • Source: CrisisLink: http://www.crisislink.org/ 13 Mary & Victor Ojakian October 14, 2009
Suicide Prevention Workshop Evergreen Valley College Helping A Suicidal Person • Listen attentively to everything that the person has to say • Comfort the person with words of encouragement • Let the person know that you are deeply concerned • If the person is at a high risk of suicide, do not leave him or her alone • Talk openly about suicide • When in doubt about what to do, call 911 immediately. Be safe • Don't promise confidentiality • Source: Suicide.org 14 Mary & Victor Ojakian October 14, 2009
Suicide Prevention Workshop Evergreen Valley College Suicide Survivors • Survivor definition: people who have lost a loved one to suicide • Survivors’ reactions: (Night Falls Fast by Kay Redfield Jamison) • Denial, disbelief and depression • Anger and rage • Intense loneliness and a pervasive sense of loss • Blame and guilt • Survivor support and grief groups: • American Foundation For Suicide Prevention • County Mental Health support group • Local grief support groups (e.g., KARA) 15 Mary & Victor Ojakian October 14, 2009
Suicide Prevention Workshop Evergreen Valley College Available Help / Resources • Suicide and Crisis Hotline numbers: • National: 1-800-273-TALK • San Francisco: (415) 781-0500 San Mateo: (650) 579-0353 • Santa Clara: (408) 683-2482 (south) and (650) 494-8420 (north) • Santa Clara County Urgent Care and Emergency Psychiatric Services (EPS) • Your school psychology center • County and community mental health providers and agencies • Palo Alto Veterans Hospital and County Office of Veterans Services • Golden Gateways, Catholic Charities of Santa Clara County (elderly) 16 Mary & Victor Ojakian October 14, 2009
Suicide Prevention Workshop Evergreen Valley College Some Websites • American Foundation for Suicide Prevention (AFSP) http://www.afsp.org/ • American Association of Suicidology (AAS) http://www.suicidology.org/web/guest/home • Suicide Prevention Resource Center (SPRC) http://www.sprc.org/ • California Office of Suicide Prevention (OSP) http://www.dmh.ca.gov/PEIStatewideProjects/SuicidePrevention.asp • National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI) http://www.nami.org/ • Jed Foundation: http://www.jedfoundation.org/ 17 Mary & Victor Ojakian October 14, 2009
Suicide Prevention Workshop Evergreen Valley College Ending Remark • "For some, talking about suicide is awkward. Our goal is to stop suicides, and to do that we need everyone's willingness to talk about it.“ • Dr. Ileana Arias, director of CDC's National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (News release September 6, 2007) 18 Mary & Victor Ojakian October 14, 2009
Suicide Prevention Workshop Evergreen Valley College The End • Questions & Answers 19 Mary & Victor Ojakian October 14, 2009