User login
Despite the strengths of American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) families and communities, IHS says, suicide remains a devastating and all-too-frequent event. Suicide is the eighth leading cause of death in the AI/AN community across all ages; the AI/AN youth suicide rate is more than twice that of the national average.
Related: Native Americans at Risk
The IHS Suicide Prevention Program is intended to help create a “safety net” of interconnected programming—health, education, law enforcement, public health and well-being, economic development, and physical and behavioral health—to maximize effectiveness of services and protect against suicide risk. As part of that effort, IHS has announced 118 awards of more than $13 million to prevent methamphetamine use and suicide in AI/AN communities.
Related: SAMHSA Awards Funds for Tribal Youth Programs
The awards build on a recently completed, nationally coordinated 6-year pilot project that funded 130 health programs through the Methamphetamine and Suicide Prevention Initiative (MSPI), which promotes the use and development of evidence-based and practice-based models that represent culturally appropriate prevention and treatment approaches. During the first 5 years of the pilot program, MSPI provided treatment services for more than 9,000 individuals and trained more than 13,000 professionals and community members in suicide crisis response.
Related: “Suicide Safe” Mobile App Fills a Gap
The National Congress of American Indians (the oldest and largest national organization of AI/AN tribal governments) has also called for a Native Hope for Life Day, or Suicide Prevention Awareness Day.
Despite the strengths of American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) families and communities, IHS says, suicide remains a devastating and all-too-frequent event. Suicide is the eighth leading cause of death in the AI/AN community across all ages; the AI/AN youth suicide rate is more than twice that of the national average.
Related: Native Americans at Risk
The IHS Suicide Prevention Program is intended to help create a “safety net” of interconnected programming—health, education, law enforcement, public health and well-being, economic development, and physical and behavioral health—to maximize effectiveness of services and protect against suicide risk. As part of that effort, IHS has announced 118 awards of more than $13 million to prevent methamphetamine use and suicide in AI/AN communities.
Related: SAMHSA Awards Funds for Tribal Youth Programs
The awards build on a recently completed, nationally coordinated 6-year pilot project that funded 130 health programs through the Methamphetamine and Suicide Prevention Initiative (MSPI), which promotes the use and development of evidence-based and practice-based models that represent culturally appropriate prevention and treatment approaches. During the first 5 years of the pilot program, MSPI provided treatment services for more than 9,000 individuals and trained more than 13,000 professionals and community members in suicide crisis response.
Related: “Suicide Safe” Mobile App Fills a Gap
The National Congress of American Indians (the oldest and largest national organization of AI/AN tribal governments) has also called for a Native Hope for Life Day, or Suicide Prevention Awareness Day.
Despite the strengths of American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) families and communities, IHS says, suicide remains a devastating and all-too-frequent event. Suicide is the eighth leading cause of death in the AI/AN community across all ages; the AI/AN youth suicide rate is more than twice that of the national average.
Related: Native Americans at Risk
The IHS Suicide Prevention Program is intended to help create a “safety net” of interconnected programming—health, education, law enforcement, public health and well-being, economic development, and physical and behavioral health—to maximize effectiveness of services and protect against suicide risk. As part of that effort, IHS has announced 118 awards of more than $13 million to prevent methamphetamine use and suicide in AI/AN communities.
Related: SAMHSA Awards Funds for Tribal Youth Programs
The awards build on a recently completed, nationally coordinated 6-year pilot project that funded 130 health programs through the Methamphetamine and Suicide Prevention Initiative (MSPI), which promotes the use and development of evidence-based and practice-based models that represent culturally appropriate prevention and treatment approaches. During the first 5 years of the pilot program, MSPI provided treatment services for more than 9,000 individuals and trained more than 13,000 professionals and community members in suicide crisis response.
Related: “Suicide Safe” Mobile App Fills a Gap
The National Congress of American Indians (the oldest and largest national organization of AI/AN tribal governments) has also called for a Native Hope for Life Day, or Suicide Prevention Awareness Day.