If you or someone you know is in crisis, please call 911, go to the nearest emergency room, text Help to 741741, or call 1-800-273-TALK (8255) to reach a 24-hour crisis support.
Ensure Access to Effective Care and Treatment
A key element of suicide prevention is ensuring that individuals with suicide risk have timely access to evidence-based treatments, suicide prevention interventions, and coordinated systems of care. Suicide prevention interventions such as safety planning and evidence-based treatments and therapies delivered by trained providers can lead to significant improvement and recovery. MHAoPC encourages health and behavioral health care systems to adopt the Zero Suicide framework for integrating these approaches into their systems. Reducing financial, cultural, and logistical barriers to care is another important strategy for ensuring access to effective mental health and suicide care treatment. Read more at Ensure Access to Effective Care and Treatment.
Ensuring that effective care for suicide risk is available to individuals at risk for suicide is a key component of suicide prevention.
What Works
Elements of effective care and treatment for suicide risk include the following:
- Treatment for suicide risk should be evidence-based and focus directly on suicidal thoughts and behaviors along with treatment for mental and/or substance use disorders.
- Every community should offer multiple levels of care so that people at risk for suicide have ready access to the best available care in the least restrictive setting.
- Health and behavioral health care organizations should establish care pathways for patients with suicide risk to ensure they receive follow-up and referral services in a timely manner—particularly during high-risk periods.
Strategies to Consider
- Use telepsychiatry to facilitate access to mental health evaluations in settings or locations where they may not be readily available.
- Promote the integration of primary care and behavioral health care to increase access to behavioral health services in primary care settings.
- Train primary care providers to provide brief suicide prevention interventions, such as counseling on reducing access to lethal means and safety planning.
- Establish referral agreements between providers to ensure that patients have timely access to follow-up care.
- Improve discharge planning procedures to identify and address patient barriers to accessing needed follow-up care.
- Collaborate with key stakeholders to expand the capacity of community-level behavioral health and crisis services to meet the demand for these services and promote care in the least restrictive setting.
Take Action
- Visit the Zero Suicide website to learn about effective care for suicide risk.
- Integrate the elements of effective suicide care into your current work.
- Go to the Primary Care, Behavioral Health, and Emergency Departments sections of this website to learn more about suicide prevention in these settings.
- Learn more about the connections between substance abuse and suicide prevention by looking at Crosswalk of Suicide Prevention and Substance Abuse, SPRC Substance Abuse and Suicide Prevention Collaboration Continuum, and TIP 50: Addressing Suicidal Thoughts and Behaviors in Substance Abuse Treatment.
- Help reduce financial, cultural, and logistical barriers to effective suicide care.
If you or someone you know is in crisis, please call 911, go to the nearest emergency room, text Help to 741741, or call 1-800-273-TALK (8255) to reach a 24-hour crisis support.