QPR Suicide Triage Training ©
QPR Suicide Triage Training is designed for anyone wishing to learn how to conduct a first level suicide risk assessment and to establish a collaborative crisis management and personal safety plan for someone considering suicide.
This training is a ‘best practice” approach for how to engage with a suicidal person, determine immediate risk of a suicide attempt, and how reduce risk factors while enhancing protective factors to bring about a life-affirming outcome to a crisis is designed for crisis line workers, clergy, school counselors, resident advisors, and all first responders.
Learning Goals and Objectives:
Participants earning a certificate for the QPR Suicide Triage Training program should be able to:
- Interview potentially suicidal people and determine immediate risk of a suicide attempt
- Reduce the risk of a suicide attempt through a collaborative crisis and safety planning process
- Know what to say, what questions to ask, what the answers to your questions mean, and how these answers will determine what needs to be done to prevent a suicide attempt
- Estimate the level of acute suicide risk using a "best practice" methodology used by thousands of mental health professionals
- Understand common terms and communicate effectively about suicide risk with other professionals
- Document precise and accurate suicide risk information in a concise and competent manner
- Immediately reduce the acute distress, despair, and hopelessness of suicidal persons through an empathic, understanding interview in which protective factors can be brought into play to create a safety and survival plan and reduce the risk of a suicide attempt
Foundational information included in this training will allow the learner to
- Describe the US National Strategy for Suicide Prevention and the major resource and training organizations in suicide prevention in America. If from another country, the learner should be able to describe national and regional suicide prevention efforts in his or her own country.
- Understand suicide as a major public health problem
- Describe the relationship of untreated mental illnesses and substance abuse to increased suicide risk
- Understand means restriction and how to immediately reduce risk
- Recognize and identify at least five risk factors for suicide
- Recognize and identify at least five protective factors against suicide
- Understand the nature of suicide and describe relevant research
- Describe groups at high risk for suicide
- Demonstrate basic engagement and helping skills in a brief assessment of suicide risk
- Recognize suicide warning signs
- Pass a nationally standardized exam on suicide risk assessment and management
This course is available online. For more information, click here