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Intervening in Child
and Teen Suicide
Intervention can take many forms and should
throughout the different stages in the process. Prevention includes education
efforts to alert students and the community to the problem of
teen suicidal behavior.
Intervention with a suicidal
student is aimed at protecting and helping the
student who is currently in
distress. Postvention occurs after there has been a suicide in the school
community. It attempts to help those affected by the recent suicide. In all
cases it is a good idea to have a clear plan in place in advance. It should
involve staff members and administration. There should be clear protocols and
clear lines of communication. Careful planning can make interventions more
organized, and effective.
Prevention often involves education. This may
be done in a health class, by the school nurse, school psychologist, guidance
counselor or outside speakers. Education should address the factors that make
individuals more vulnerable to suicidal thoughts. These would include
depression, family stress, loss, and drug abuse. Other interventions may also
be helpful. Anything that decreases drug and alcohol abuse would be useful. A
study by Rich et al found that 67% of completed youth suicides involved mixed
substance abuse. PTA meetings family spaghetti dinners can draw in parents so
that they can be educated about depression and suicidal behavior. Turn
off the TV Week campaigns can increase family communication if the family
continues with the reduced TV viewing. Parents should be educated about the
risk of unsecured firearms in the home. Peer mediation and peer counseling
programs can make help more accessible. However, it is critical that students
go to an adult if serious behaviors or suicidal issues emerge. Outside mental
health professionals can discuss their programs so that students can see that
these individuals are approachable.
Intervention With a Suicidal Student
Many schools have a written protocol for
dealing with a student who shows
signs of suicidal or other
dangerous behavior. Some schools have automatic expulsion policies for
students who engage in illegal or violent behavior. It is important to remember
that teens who are violent or abuse drugs may be at increased
risk for suicide. If someone is
expelled, the school should attempt to help the parents arrange immediate, and
possibly intensive psychiatric and behavioral intervention.
Calm the immediate crisis situation. Do not
leave the suicidal student alone even for a minute. Ask whether he or she is in
possession of any potentially dangerous objects or medications. If the student
has dangerous items on his person, be calm and try to verbally persuade the
student to give them to you. Do not engage in a physical struggle to get the
items. Call administration or the designated crisis team. Escort the student
away from other students to a safe place where the crisis team members can talk
to him. Be sure that there is access to a telephone.
The crisis individuals then interview the
student and determine the potential risk for suicide.
- If the student is holding on to dangerous
items, it is the highest risk situation. Staff should call an ambulance and
police and the students parents. Staff should try to calm the student and
ask for the dangerous items.
- If the student has no dangerous objects, but
appears to be an immediate suicide risk, it would be considered a high-risk
situation. If the student is upset because of
physical or sexual abuse, staff should notify the
appropriate school personnel and contact Child Protective Services. If there is
o evidence of abuse or neglect, staff should contact parents and ask them to
come in to pick up their child. Staff should inform them fully about the
situation and strongly encourage them to take their child to a mental health
professional for an evaluation. The team should give the parents a list of
telephone numbers of crisis clinics. If the school is unable to contact
parents, and if Protective Services or the police cannot intervene, designated
staff should take the student to a nearby emergency room.
- If the student has had
suicidal
thoughts but does not seem likely to hurt himself in the near future, the
risk is more moderate. If abuse or neglect is involved, staff should proceed as
in the high-risk process. If there is no evidence of abuse, the parents should
still be called to come in. They should be encouraged to take their child for
an immediate evaluation.
- Follow-Up: It is important to document all
actions taken. The crisis team may meet after the incident to go over the
situation. Friends of the student should be given some limited information
about what has transpired. Designated staff should follow up with the student
and parents to determine whether the student is receiving appropriate mental
health services. Show the student that there is ongoing care and concern in the
school.
Prevention
An attempted or completed suicide can have a
powerful effect on the staff and on the other students. There are conflicting
reports on the incidence of a contagion effect creating more suicides. However,
there is no doubt that individuals close to the dead student may have years of
distress. One study found an increased incidence of major depression and
posttraumatic stress disorder 1.5 to 3 years after the suicide. There have been
clusters of suicides in adolescents. Some feel that media sensationalization or
idealized obituaries of the deceased may contribute to this phenomenon.
The school should have plans in place to deal
with a suicide or other major crisis in the school community. The
administration or the designated individual should try to get as much
information as soon as possible. He or she should meet with teachers and staff
to inform them of the suicide. The teachers or other staff should inform each
class of students. It is important that all of the students hear the same
thing. After they have been informed, they should have the opportunity to talk
about it. Those who wish should be excused to talk to crisis counselors. The
school should have extra counselors available for students and staff who need
to talk. Students who appear to be the most severely affected may need parental
notification and outside mental health referrals. Rumor control is important.
There should be a designated person to deal with the media. Refusing to talk to
the media takes away the chance to influence what information will be in the
news. One should remind the media reporters that sensational reporting has the
potential for increasing a contagion effect. They should ask the media to be
careful in how they report the incident. Media should avoid repeated or
sensationalistic coverage. They should not provide enough details of the
suicide method to create a how to description. They should try not
to glorify the individual or present the suicidal behavior as a legitimate
strategy for coping with difficult situations.
What can you do to support a student
with suicidal thoughts and a low self-esteem?
- Listen actively. Teach problem-solving
skills.
- Encourage positive thinking. Instead of saying
that he cannot do something, he should say that he will try.
- Help the student write a list of his or her
good qualities.
- Give the student opportunities for success.
Give as much praise as possible.
- Help the student set up a step-by-step plan to
achieve his goals.
- Talk to the family so that they can understand
how the student is feeling.
- He or she might benefit from assertiveness
training.
- Helping others may raise ones
self-esteem.
- Get the student involved in positive
activities in school or in the community.
- If appropriate, involve the students
religious community.
- Make up a contract with rewards for positive
and new behaviors.
This checklist is from the
American Foundation for Suicide
Prevention
The National Hopeline Network 1-800-SUICIDE
provides access to trained telephone counselors, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
Or for a crisis
center in your area, go here.
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