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– “The caretaker of all living things” – that was the good-natured moniker 7-year-old Daniel Barden had earned from his family – according to his dad, Mark Barden. Daniel would pick up black ants and take them outside “to be with their families,” even when the ant bit his fingers.

Tara Haelle/MDedge News
Mark Barden

A walk down the sidewalk after a rain would take three times longer than it should because Daniel stopped to pick up every worm on the pavement and put it in the grass, lest it dry out in the sun, Mr. Barden said with a chuckle at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Daniel was his youngest and full of pure joy, Mr. Barden said, but that ended with his son’s murder during the Sandy Hook Elementary mass shooting Dec. 14, 2012. To honor his son and work to reduce the likelihood of similar mass shootings, Mr. Barden, now the managing director of Sandy Hook Promise in Newtown, Conn., shared with the pediatrician audience the work of the organization formed by Sandy Hook parents to attempt to prevent gun violence before it happens.

“We’re moms and dads and a couple of families who have lost loved ones in that tragedy, and we are growing as an organization,” Mr. Barden said. “Our basic, most fundamental objective is to prevent other families from living with the pain I will live with for the rest of my life.”

Their mission involves “creating a culture engaged and committed to identifying, intervening, and getting help for individuals who may be at risk of hurting themselves or others,” Mr. Barden said.

Sandy Hook Promise accomplishes this goal by educating and empowering communities through their four programs: Start with Hello, SOS Suicide Prevention Program, SaySomething, and Safety Assessment & Intervention. The organization delivers these programs through multiple platforms, including national and local trainers, digital curriculum downloads, interactive online training videos, and using multilingual presenters and English and Spanish materials.

The organization also especially works with schools and student’s clubs to change their culture and feel empowered to speak up and do their part to prevent gun violence too.

These programs resulted from extensive qualitative and quantitative research that Sandy Hook Promise conducted after the shooting with academic researchers, law enforcement, educators, school administrators, mental health professionals, and social movement experts.

“As we see these stories play themselves out over and over again, we start to reveal the story of somebody who didn’t just snap overnight,” Mr. Barden said. Signs that a person may be at risk for committing mass violence include suicidality, preoccupation with weapons, talking about committing violent acts, and general signs of depression and anxiety. “If we can train people how to not only recognize but to look for those signs, we can make a sustainable difference,” he said.

Most mass shootings are planned at least 6 months in advance, he said. About 80% of school shooters tell someone about their plans, and 69% tell multiple people. Similarly, up to 70% of people who die by suicide tell someone they plan to do it or give some other warning sign.

Further, more than a third of violent threats and bullying occurs electronically, so students are well equipped to watch for the signs and report them if they know how and feel comfortable doing so.

Mr. Barden outlined the goals of each of the four Sandy Hook Promise programs.
 

 

 

Start With Hello

This program “teaches youth how to identify and minimize social isolation, marginalization, and rejection in order to create an inclusive, connected community,” Mr. Barden explained. The goals of the program are to reduce bullying, foster socialization, increase engagement, and change a culture from within.

SOS Signs of Suicide

This is Sandy Hook Promise’s newest program and is built on a program developed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation following the Virginia Tech shooting and adapted for school-based applications.

“It also develops a multidisciplinary team within the school who acts as various touch points who know how to recognize a potential warning sign and then triage that information and take steps to get to the root cause of that behavior and not just bandage the wound,” Mr. Barden explained.
 

SaySomething

The organization’s flagship program does the most to recruit student involvement in recognizing the signs of a potential threat, particularly in social media, and report the individual and their behavior to a trusted adult or through Sandy Hook Promise’s Anonymous Reporting System.

“The kids take this one, and they run with it and do amazing things with it,” Mr. Barden said, noting that it particularly helps students recognize warning signs on social media. “We have growing evidence of kids following this model, and we’ve already prevented mass shootings and numerous suicides with this.”
 

Safety Assessment & Intervention (SAI) program

This program “trains a multidisciplinary team how to identify, assess, and respond to threats and observed at-risk behaviors,” Mr. Barden said. SAI aims to create a safer, more open school environment with less violence, bullying, and threats. That includes reducing educators’ fear and anxiety, and leading students to have a more positive view of teachers and staff.

Students can report tips to the Anonymous Reporting System through the website, calling the hot line or via a free mobile app. Regardless of the method, the anonymous tips go to a 24/7 multilingual crisis center and, if needed, law enforcement. The crisis center contacts the appropriate school official via text, email, or a phone call, and the case is tracked in real time until it’s addressed, resolved, and closed.

All of these programs are freely available to any school or institution who wants to use them, Mr. Barden said, because the organization does not want cost to get in the way of any school or community that is taking advantage of tools to reduce the risk of violence.

In fact, more than 3.5 million youth and adults in more than 7,000 schools in every state have been trained in these programs, helping hundreds of youth access mental health and wellness help, he said. The program has reduced truancy, bullying, and other forms of violence and victimization, and it has intervened in multiple school shooting plans across the United States.

Mr. Barden wrapped up his address with his gratitude for pediatricians’ willingness to be partners in reducing gun violence.

“I want to tell you how much it means to me that you took the time to come here and listen to my story and the work I’m doing,” he said, “and how proud I am to be able to share it with you, and how proud I am to be able to honor that little kid who truly was the caretaker of all living things and to continue that spirit in his honor and in his absence.”

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– “The caretaker of all living things” – that was the good-natured moniker 7-year-old Daniel Barden had earned from his family – according to his dad, Mark Barden. Daniel would pick up black ants and take them outside “to be with their families,” even when the ant bit his fingers.

Tara Haelle/MDedge News
Mark Barden

A walk down the sidewalk after a rain would take three times longer than it should because Daniel stopped to pick up every worm on the pavement and put it in the grass, lest it dry out in the sun, Mr. Barden said with a chuckle at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Daniel was his youngest and full of pure joy, Mr. Barden said, but that ended with his son’s murder during the Sandy Hook Elementary mass shooting Dec. 14, 2012. To honor his son and work to reduce the likelihood of similar mass shootings, Mr. Barden, now the managing director of Sandy Hook Promise in Newtown, Conn., shared with the pediatrician audience the work of the organization formed by Sandy Hook parents to attempt to prevent gun violence before it happens.

“We’re moms and dads and a couple of families who have lost loved ones in that tragedy, and we are growing as an organization,” Mr. Barden said. “Our basic, most fundamental objective is to prevent other families from living with the pain I will live with for the rest of my life.”

Their mission involves “creating a culture engaged and committed to identifying, intervening, and getting help for individuals who may be at risk of hurting themselves or others,” Mr. Barden said.

Sandy Hook Promise accomplishes this goal by educating and empowering communities through their four programs: Start with Hello, SOS Suicide Prevention Program, SaySomething, and Safety Assessment & Intervention. The organization delivers these programs through multiple platforms, including national and local trainers, digital curriculum downloads, interactive online training videos, and using multilingual presenters and English and Spanish materials.

The organization also especially works with schools and student’s clubs to change their culture and feel empowered to speak up and do their part to prevent gun violence too.

These programs resulted from extensive qualitative and quantitative research that Sandy Hook Promise conducted after the shooting with academic researchers, law enforcement, educators, school administrators, mental health professionals, and social movement experts.

“As we see these stories play themselves out over and over again, we start to reveal the story of somebody who didn’t just snap overnight,” Mr. Barden said. Signs that a person may be at risk for committing mass violence include suicidality, preoccupation with weapons, talking about committing violent acts, and general signs of depression and anxiety. “If we can train people how to not only recognize but to look for those signs, we can make a sustainable difference,” he said.

Most mass shootings are planned at least 6 months in advance, he said. About 80% of school shooters tell someone about their plans, and 69% tell multiple people. Similarly, up to 70% of people who die by suicide tell someone they plan to do it or give some other warning sign.

Further, more than a third of violent threats and bullying occurs electronically, so students are well equipped to watch for the signs and report them if they know how and feel comfortable doing so.

Mr. Barden outlined the goals of each of the four Sandy Hook Promise programs.
 

 

 

Start With Hello

This program “teaches youth how to identify and minimize social isolation, marginalization, and rejection in order to create an inclusive, connected community,” Mr. Barden explained. The goals of the program are to reduce bullying, foster socialization, increase engagement, and change a culture from within.

SOS Signs of Suicide

This is Sandy Hook Promise’s newest program and is built on a program developed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation following the Virginia Tech shooting and adapted for school-based applications.

“It also develops a multidisciplinary team within the school who acts as various touch points who know how to recognize a potential warning sign and then triage that information and take steps to get to the root cause of that behavior and not just bandage the wound,” Mr. Barden explained.
 

SaySomething

The organization’s flagship program does the most to recruit student involvement in recognizing the signs of a potential threat, particularly in social media, and report the individual and their behavior to a trusted adult or through Sandy Hook Promise’s Anonymous Reporting System.

“The kids take this one, and they run with it and do amazing things with it,” Mr. Barden said, noting that it particularly helps students recognize warning signs on social media. “We have growing evidence of kids following this model, and we’ve already prevented mass shootings and numerous suicides with this.”
 

Safety Assessment & Intervention (SAI) program

This program “trains a multidisciplinary team how to identify, assess, and respond to threats and observed at-risk behaviors,” Mr. Barden said. SAI aims to create a safer, more open school environment with less violence, bullying, and threats. That includes reducing educators’ fear and anxiety, and leading students to have a more positive view of teachers and staff.

Students can report tips to the Anonymous Reporting System through the website, calling the hot line or via a free mobile app. Regardless of the method, the anonymous tips go to a 24/7 multilingual crisis center and, if needed, law enforcement. The crisis center contacts the appropriate school official via text, email, or a phone call, and the case is tracked in real time until it’s addressed, resolved, and closed.

All of these programs are freely available to any school or institution who wants to use them, Mr. Barden said, because the organization does not want cost to get in the way of any school or community that is taking advantage of tools to reduce the risk of violence.

In fact, more than 3.5 million youth and adults in more than 7,000 schools in every state have been trained in these programs, helping hundreds of youth access mental health and wellness help, he said. The program has reduced truancy, bullying, and other forms of violence and victimization, and it has intervened in multiple school shooting plans across the United States.

Mr. Barden wrapped up his address with his gratitude for pediatricians’ willingness to be partners in reducing gun violence.

“I want to tell you how much it means to me that you took the time to come here and listen to my story and the work I’m doing,” he said, “and how proud I am to be able to share it with you, and how proud I am to be able to honor that little kid who truly was the caretaker of all living things and to continue that spirit in his honor and in his absence.”

 

– “The caretaker of all living things” – that was the good-natured moniker 7-year-old Daniel Barden had earned from his family – according to his dad, Mark Barden. Daniel would pick up black ants and take them outside “to be with their families,” even when the ant bit his fingers.

Tara Haelle/MDedge News
Mark Barden

A walk down the sidewalk after a rain would take three times longer than it should because Daniel stopped to pick up every worm on the pavement and put it in the grass, lest it dry out in the sun, Mr. Barden said with a chuckle at the annual meeting of the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Daniel was his youngest and full of pure joy, Mr. Barden said, but that ended with his son’s murder during the Sandy Hook Elementary mass shooting Dec. 14, 2012. To honor his son and work to reduce the likelihood of similar mass shootings, Mr. Barden, now the managing director of Sandy Hook Promise in Newtown, Conn., shared with the pediatrician audience the work of the organization formed by Sandy Hook parents to attempt to prevent gun violence before it happens.

“We’re moms and dads and a couple of families who have lost loved ones in that tragedy, and we are growing as an organization,” Mr. Barden said. “Our basic, most fundamental objective is to prevent other families from living with the pain I will live with for the rest of my life.”

Their mission involves “creating a culture engaged and committed to identifying, intervening, and getting help for individuals who may be at risk of hurting themselves or others,” Mr. Barden said.

Sandy Hook Promise accomplishes this goal by educating and empowering communities through their four programs: Start with Hello, SOS Suicide Prevention Program, SaySomething, and Safety Assessment & Intervention. The organization delivers these programs through multiple platforms, including national and local trainers, digital curriculum downloads, interactive online training videos, and using multilingual presenters and English and Spanish materials.

The organization also especially works with schools and student’s clubs to change their culture and feel empowered to speak up and do their part to prevent gun violence too.

These programs resulted from extensive qualitative and quantitative research that Sandy Hook Promise conducted after the shooting with academic researchers, law enforcement, educators, school administrators, mental health professionals, and social movement experts.

“As we see these stories play themselves out over and over again, we start to reveal the story of somebody who didn’t just snap overnight,” Mr. Barden said. Signs that a person may be at risk for committing mass violence include suicidality, preoccupation with weapons, talking about committing violent acts, and general signs of depression and anxiety. “If we can train people how to not only recognize but to look for those signs, we can make a sustainable difference,” he said.

Most mass shootings are planned at least 6 months in advance, he said. About 80% of school shooters tell someone about their plans, and 69% tell multiple people. Similarly, up to 70% of people who die by suicide tell someone they plan to do it or give some other warning sign.

Further, more than a third of violent threats and bullying occurs electronically, so students are well equipped to watch for the signs and report them if they know how and feel comfortable doing so.

Mr. Barden outlined the goals of each of the four Sandy Hook Promise programs.
 

 

 

Start With Hello

This program “teaches youth how to identify and minimize social isolation, marginalization, and rejection in order to create an inclusive, connected community,” Mr. Barden explained. The goals of the program are to reduce bullying, foster socialization, increase engagement, and change a culture from within.

SOS Signs of Suicide

This is Sandy Hook Promise’s newest program and is built on a program developed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation following the Virginia Tech shooting and adapted for school-based applications.

“It also develops a multidisciplinary team within the school who acts as various touch points who know how to recognize a potential warning sign and then triage that information and take steps to get to the root cause of that behavior and not just bandage the wound,” Mr. Barden explained.
 

SaySomething

The organization’s flagship program does the most to recruit student involvement in recognizing the signs of a potential threat, particularly in social media, and report the individual and their behavior to a trusted adult or through Sandy Hook Promise’s Anonymous Reporting System.

“The kids take this one, and they run with it and do amazing things with it,” Mr. Barden said, noting that it particularly helps students recognize warning signs on social media. “We have growing evidence of kids following this model, and we’ve already prevented mass shootings and numerous suicides with this.”
 

Safety Assessment & Intervention (SAI) program

This program “trains a multidisciplinary team how to identify, assess, and respond to threats and observed at-risk behaviors,” Mr. Barden said. SAI aims to create a safer, more open school environment with less violence, bullying, and threats. That includes reducing educators’ fear and anxiety, and leading students to have a more positive view of teachers and staff.

Students can report tips to the Anonymous Reporting System through the website, calling the hot line or via a free mobile app. Regardless of the method, the anonymous tips go to a 24/7 multilingual crisis center and, if needed, law enforcement. The crisis center contacts the appropriate school official via text, email, or a phone call, and the case is tracked in real time until it’s addressed, resolved, and closed.

All of these programs are freely available to any school or institution who wants to use them, Mr. Barden said, because the organization does not want cost to get in the way of any school or community that is taking advantage of tools to reduce the risk of violence.

In fact, more than 3.5 million youth and adults in more than 7,000 schools in every state have been trained in these programs, helping hundreds of youth access mental health and wellness help, he said. The program has reduced truancy, bullying, and other forms of violence and victimization, and it has intervened in multiple school shooting plans across the United States.

Mr. Barden wrapped up his address with his gratitude for pediatricians’ willingness to be partners in reducing gun violence.

“I want to tell you how much it means to me that you took the time to come here and listen to my story and the work I’m doing,” he said, “and how proud I am to be able to share it with you, and how proud I am to be able to honor that little kid who truly was the caretaker of all living things and to continue that spirit in his honor and in his absence.”

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