Learning mental health first aid could save many lives

The Montana Gap

For many Montanans who are experiencing feelings of self-harm, their friends, family members, coworkers, neighbors, favorite baristas or even the stranger they just met on the street corner may be their first and only line of defense against suicide.

Yet while the man or woman on the street may not have the formal education of a therapist, there are tools they can use to help prevent the next suicide – and organizations like Pintler Suicide Awareness and Prevention (PSAP) exist to help people learn what those tools are and how to use them, tools like mental health first aid.

PSAP is a nonprofit, volunteer organization that formed in Anaconda in 2009 after several suicides that occurred within a short period of time shook the community. Its stated mission is to raise awareness about the high suicide risk in Southwest Montana and provide both educational opportunities for suicide prevention and intervention as well as grief support for people who've lost loved ones to suicide.

The Rev. Mary Alice Jones, a PSAP member, deacon of St. Mark's Episcopal Church in Anaconda, and also an amateur magician, recently put on a magic show with her husband and son as part of a benefit for PSAP. After the show, she discussed the ways the organization equips the layman to help prevent suicide.

"It's not the case that you have to be a licensed professional counselor to help a person who's considering suicide," Jones said. "The average person isn't a therapist – won't be a therapist – but the average person can know mental health first aid."

One approach to mental health first aid is Question, Persuade, Refer (QPR), which Jones and other PSAP members as certified QPR trainers are able to teach anyone free of charge who's willing to set aside one to two hours of their time.

Much like CPR is first aid for the body, QPR training is intended to educate people on the risks and warning signs of someone who may be suicidal and encourage trainees to move beyond the social stigma of not talking about depression and suicide so they can ask the key question: "Are you considering suicide?"

If so, then under the QPR Institute's model the next steps are to be able to persuade the person in crisis to get help and refer them to a confidential source of help, such as the 24-hour helpline, 1-800-273-TALK, the text message helpline, 741-741, their local public health department, licensed counselors or therapists in their area, or agency websites like the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration – samhsa.gov – that has an anonymous treatment services locator tool.

"If someone knows what the warning signs of a potential suicide are, they can intervene," Jones said. "A lot of it falls to the person on the street recognizing what the situation is, letting them vent, offering simple gestures of care, showing them that they matter... We have to move beyond the fallacy of thinking that by talking with someone about suicide it will cause that person to attempt suicide."

Yet whether talking about suicide with people who are contemplating suicide actually prevents them from attempting it or not is a question that remains unanswered, at least from an empirical standpoint. A 2015 article in the RAND Corporation's RAND Health Quarterly, http://www.rand.org/pubs/periodicals/health-quarterly, entitled "Gatekeeper Training for Suicide Prevention," analyzed the effectiveness of prevention efforts like QPR that are geared toward "gatekeepers" – individuals who have face-to-face contact with large numbers of community members as part of their daily life – and found this topic has largely been unstudied.

The article cites a 2004 study of QPR training among university staff that showed more adaptive attitudes about suicide and intervention were "significantly associated with a lower probability of self-reported suicide attempts in the three months following program implementation," though the article adds that the training encompassed more than QPR. The article also cites a 2007 study of the army of Serbia and Montenegro's implementation of a similar program, which showed that deaths by suicide had decreased, though the study could not determine whether the program had caused that reduction or was merely correlated with it.

If success were to be measured by the number of QPR trainers, however, then the model appears to be effective: according to the QPR Institute's website, qprinstitute.com, there are over 2.5 million people who have completed the training, making it the most widely distributed such system in the world.

The website further cites three studies published within the past 10 years that were reviewed by the National Registry of Evidence-based Practice and Policies which found that people who had completed QPR training had more knowledge, were more confident and better capable of engaging in suicide prevention skills such as active listening, asking clarifying questions and making an appropriate referral than they were before the training. One of the studies touted by the QPR Institute's website showed that after state-mandated training in Tennessee, over 42 percent of participants in the training had identified at least one at-risk youth and intervened within six months of taking the course.

The Montana Department of Health and Human Services (DPHHS) recommends QPR training for all middle school and high school staff, including teachers, paraprofessionals, bus drivers, custodians and food service personnel. All primary care providers also have to take mandatory suicide prevention training and suicide risk assessment training.

Regardless of how it's done or what training measures are used to enable laymen to do it, getting someone who is considering suicide into a situation of help is a life-saving act, Jones said.

"Our role isn't to try to fix the person, it's to connect them with a source of help," she said. "If that happens, their odds are astronomically better."

The data appears to back up her claim. According to the DPHHS' 2016 Suicide Mortality Review Team Report, only 13 percent of people who died from suicide in Montana since 2013 – 74 out of 555 – had received public mental health services. Nearly three-quarters of people who died from suicide in that span had exhibited at least three warning signs prior to doing so.

"Our society trains people in physical first aid, but if people would take the time to be trained in mental first aid that would save a lot of lives," Jones said. "We don't realize the power we have to intervene in someone else's life for the better."

For more information about Pintler Suicide Awareness and Prevention and to schedule a QPR training session, contact Dawnne Woodie at (406) 691-0332.

 

Reader Comments(0)

 
 
Rendered 03/28/2024 08:44