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Suicide Prevention Month Starting A Conversation Can Save A Life

NAMI by NAMI
September 23, 2024
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Learn about the importance of starting a conversation during Suicide Prevention Month. Discover how a simple conversation can save a life.

More Than Enough Mental Health Awareness Month 2023

If you or someone you know is struggling or in crisis, help is available. Call or text 988 or chat 988lifeline.org to reach the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline.

Suicide Prevention Month

Suicidal thoughts, much like mental health conditions, can affect anyone regardless of age, gender or background. Suicidal thoughts, although common, should not be considered normal and often indicate more serious issues.

September is Suicide Prevention Month — a time to raise awareness of this urgently important crisis. We use this month to shift public perception, spread hope and share vital information to people affected by suicide. Our goal is ensuring that individuals, friends and families have access to the resources they need to discuss suicide prevention and to seek help.

Crisis Resources

If you or someone you know is experiencing a mental health crisis, call or text 988 immediately.

You can also chat with the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at 988lifeline.org.

Know the Warning Signs and Risk Factors of Suicide

Being Prepared for a Crisis

Read our guide, “Navigating a Mental Health Crisis”

What You Need to Know About Youth Suicide

Need more information, referrals or support? Contact the NAMI HelpLine.

Download the Toolkit

We at NAMI have created this toolkit to support NAMI State Organizations and Affiliates, partners and ambassadors, and other mental health champions in an effort to promote Suicide Prevention Month. We encourage you to use these resources in your own promotion and awareness efforts.

Join us in shifting the mental health culture through conversation. Download our toolkit for more insights and resources on how to spread awareness.

Download Toolkit

Join the Conversation

Throughout September, we invite you to share our messages below or your own about Suicide Prevention Month through the power of courageous community conversations. Help us amplify the message that there is strength in vulnerability.

Don’t forget to tag us at @NAMICommunicate on Instagram and X (formerly Twitter) and @NAMI on TikTok, LinkedIn, and Facebook. And be sure to use the hashtag #SuicidePreventionMonth in your posts.

In every post, please add language or a reply comment providing information to 988. This can include but is not limited to:

Call, text, or chat 988 to speak to a trained crisis counselor offering support 24/7/365.

Platforms

Weekly/daily activations will be taking place on NAMI’s social media channels. Follow NAMI to tune in, repost, retweet, and share: Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, Threads, TikTok, X, YouTube

Hashtag

#SuicidePreventionMonth

URL: nami.org/suicidepreventionmonth

Starting a conversation can help save a life. Studies show people who are having thoughts of suicide feel relief when someone asks about them in a caring way. Learn more about how to help support someone you care about through a crisis at nami.org/suicidepreventionmonth.

While suicide prevention is important to address year-round, Suicide Prevention Month provides a dedicated time to come together with collective passion and strength to address this difficult topic. The truth is, we can all benefit from honest conversations about mental health conditions and suicide, because just one conversation can change a life.

Advocate

Join our movement to advocate for a better mental health care system by signing up for advocacy alerts and taking action when opportunities arise in your community.

Your advocacy matters to help people in mental health and suicidal crisis! Visit NAMI’s 988 Crisis Response State Legislation Map to learn more about what’s happening in your state and across the country.

Read and share NAMI’s State Legislative Brief on Trends in State Policy: 988 and Reimagining Crisis Response to learn about innovative ways states are improving suicide prevention and crisis services.

Explore how your community can #ReimagineCrisis. Find advocacy resources and information to build a better mental health and suicide crisis response system for everyone, no matter who they are or where they live.

Join us in recognizing #988Day on September 8. 988 Day is a national initiative dedicated to raising awareness about 988 and emphasizing the importance of mental health and suicide prevention.

Stay up to date on how you can advocate for better suicide prevention and mental health crisis support by signing up for NAMI’s Federal Advocacy Alerts.

Order “You Are Not Alone for Parents and Caregivers”

In “You Are Not Alone for Parents and Caregivers,” child psychiatrist and NAMI’s Associate Medical Director Dr. Christine M. Crawford provides a comprehensive, compassionate, and practical resource for anyone concerned about a child’s mental health. Drawing on her own clinical experience and guidance from leading experts, Dr. Crawford provides a lens through which to understand the many complex factors affecting children’s mental health. Analyzing young people from preschool to high school, she shares insights into how mental health conditions may manifest at different ages, what kind of interventions may be necessary, and what to do to help kids thrive. Throughout, the book channels the collective wisdom of the NAMI community. Parents, caregivers, and young people themselves share personal stories about their paths to recovery, ensuring readers know that they are not alone.

Order the book via: Amazon, Target, Barnes & Noble, Books-A-Million, and Bookshop.org.

Share Key Fast Facts

Please feel free to use these facts and others, to encourage discussions with your community through social media or other forms of outreach.

Individual Impact:

79% of all people who die by suicide are male.

Although more women than men attempt suicide, men are 4x more likely to die by suicide.

Suicide is the 2nd leading cause of death among people aged 10-14, the 3rd leading cause of death among those aged 15-24 and the 12th leading cause of death overall in the U.S.

46% of people who die by suicide had a diagnosed mental health condition — but research suggests that 90% may have experienced symptoms of a mental health condition.

Community Impact:

Annual prevalence of serious thoughts of suicide, by U.S. demographic group:

U.S. Adults: 4.8%

Native Hawaiian/other Pacific Islander: 7.4%

Mixed/Multiracial: 8.2%

American Indian/Alaska Native: 8.5%

Young adults aged 18-25: 13%

High school students: 22%

LGBTQ youth: 41%

  • The highest rates of suicide in the U.S. are among American Indian/Alaskan Natives, followed bynon-Hispanic white people.
  • Lesbian, gay and bisexual youth are 4x more likely to attempt suicide than straight youth.
  • Transgender adults are nearly 9x more likely to attempt suicide at some point in their life compared to their peers.
  • Suicide is the leading cause of death for people held in local jails.

Data from CDC, NIMH and other select sources.

Post Views: 3
Tags: communicationmental illnesspreventionsuicidesupport

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