Suicide Prevention and Intervention

In the Fall of 2020, Riverside County Superintendent of Schools Dr. Edwin Gomez established the Mental Health Initiative. The Mental Health Initiative supports and expands mental health and wellness programs and services within Local Educational Agencies (LEAs) in Riverside County.

The Riverside County Board of Education and Riverside County Superintendent of Schools acknowledge that suicide is a leading cause of death among youth, and that school personnel who regularly interact with students are often in a position to recognize the warning signs of suicide and to offer appropriate referrals and/or assistance. RCOE collaborates with community partners and connects LEAs to available resources and trainings to support suicide prevention throughout Riverside County.

RCOE and CDE 

To attempt to reduce suicidal behavior and its impact on students and families, RCOE has developed measures and strategies for suicide prevention, intervention, and postvention - as outlined in the following policies:

Assembly Bill 2246, which was approved September 2016, requires “…the governing board… that serves pupils in grades 7 to 12… adopt a policy on pupil suicide prevention… that specifically addresses the needs of high-risk groups,” which include:

  • Youth bereaved by suicide
  • Youth with disabilities, mental illness, substance use disorders
  • Youth experiencing homelessness or in out-of-home settings
  • LGTBQ youth

To help Local Education Agencies (LEAs) develop their own policies, the California Department of Education (CDE) collaborated with mental health professionals, including the Student Mental Health Policy Workgroup, to create a Model Policy

AB 2639 (September 2018) updates the language of AB 2246 to ensure that Local Education Agencies review their suicide prevention policies “at a minimum every fifth year."

 


 

State Legislation

AB 1808 (Approved June 2018)

SB 972 (Approved September 2018)

  • Pupil and Student Health: Identification Cards, Suicide Prevention Hotline
    • Schools serving pupils in grades 7 to 12 … and that issues pupil identification cards shall have printed on either side of the pupil identification cards …”
      1. National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, 988
      2. Crisis Text Line, which can be accessed by texting HOME to 741741
      3. A local suicide prevention hotline telephone number
StudentIDCard_SuicidePrevention

SB 906 (approved July 2023)

  • Requires LEAs to include information on safe firearm storage and CA’s child access prevention laws
  • Restriction of Lethal Means (supported by SB 906’s requirements)
    • States with higher percentage of firearms in homes have higher suicide rates
    • 49% of 14- to 18-year-old suicide deaths by firearm
      • 59% among males in this age group
      • 82% = home as source of firearm used
      • 3- to 4-fold increased risk of adolescent suicide if home has a firearm

The Riverside County Suicide Prevention Coalition (SPC) is made up of eight sub-committees and workgroups. Each sub-committee has their own unique set of goals and objectives that work toward advancing the goals of the strategic plan, and our mission in Riverside County is to eliminate suicide.

RCOE staff co-chair the SPC Engaging Schools Sub-committee .

Goal: Standardize policies and curriculum to promote connectedness and address suicide risk.

Objectives:

  • Implement programs that foster social emotional growth.
  • Develop and implement standardized suicide risk assessment tools and prevention plans.
  • Assist schools with the implementation of trauma-informed practices.

The SPC offers a variety of workshops and training designed to help you learn when someone may be at risk of suicide and how to help. Please visit their Get Trained webpage for more information.

You can read more about the SPC in their Suicide Prevention Strategic Plan . Interested in joining the Riverside County Suicide Prevention Coalition? Sign up here!

Suicide Prevention Coalition Flyer

























Suicide Prevention Coalition Sub-committees Flyer












SPC Sub-committees

Riverside County Crisis Supports

















Riverside County Crisis Supports

Online Suicide Prevention Training

AB 1808 added Section 216 to the California Education Code and provided funding to ensure school staff was prepared to identify, support, and refer middle and high school students who may be experiencing thoughts of suicide. The bill also called for the training to be offered to middle and high school students. The CDE selected LivingWorks Start as the online training program and the San Diego County Office of Education as the lead to make this online training available, at no cost, to local educational agencies (LEAs) to voluntarily use as part of their youth suicide prevention policy.

Training FLyer

LivingWorks Start Training Flyer
Contact Heather Nemour for more information: heather.nemour@sdcoe.net


The Riverside County Suicide Prevention Coalition (SPC) has put together a variety of workshops designed to help you learn when someone may be at risk of suicide and how to help. For more information, please visit their Get Trained webpage . For upcoming training dates, registration forms, or more information, please call (951) 955-3448.

Virtual Trainings

In-Person Trainings

  • Youth Mental Health First Aid
  • Mental Health First Aid
  • ASIST (Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training)
  • SafeTALK (Tell, Ask, Listen, KeepSafe)
  • QPR (Question Persuade Response)
  • SPARE (Suicide Prevention and Risk Assessment)

988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline

The 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline offers 24/7 access to trained crisis counselors who can help people experiencing mental health-related distress. That could be:

  • Thoughts of suicide
  • Mental health or substance use crisis, or
  • Any other kind of emotion distress

People can call or text 988 or chat 988lifeline.org for themselves or if they are worried about a loved one who may need crisis support.

988 serves as a universal entry point so that no matter where you live in the United States, you can reach a trained crisis counselor who can help.


Inland SoCal Crisis Hotline

The Inland SoCal Crisis Helpline (951.686.HELP) is the regional 24/7 crisis and suicide hotline for Inland Southern California. It is free and confidential, and you may remain anonymous. Trained counselors are available to provide support and resources to best help you. Bilingual counselors are available.

The Inland SoCal Crisis Helpline was founded in 1968 and is a project of Inland SoCal 211+ and Inland SoCal United Way making it one of the longest running suicide hotlines in the state of California.

The line is answered by staff, volunteers and interns who serve as crisis counselors after a 50-hour evidence-based training.


Prevention


Screening & Safety Plan Creation


Postvention


Additional Resources

Dr. Pablo Sanchez

Contact

Dr. Pablo Sanchez
Director II
pjsanchez@rcoe.us
(951) 826-6392

Report Abuse

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