Policy Priority: Project 2025
With guidance from the top minds in the field and dynamic data modeling, AFSP has identified and prioritized critical areas where suicide risk can be potentially reduced for the greatest number of people in the shortest amount of time.
Our four critical areas are firearms, healthcare systems, emergency departments, and corrections systems. Public policies in these areas will support the project’s bold goal of reducing the nation’s annual suicide rate 20% by the year 2025.
Firearms
Separating suicidal individuals from lethal means (methods) helps to prevent suicide; firearms are highly lethal and are used in over half of all suicide deaths nationally. AFSP estimates that if half of all firearm purchasers are exposed to suicide prevention education, 9,500 lives can be saved through 2025.
- Support and fund research on firearms and suicide prevention.
- Promote the creation and distribution of educational materials regarding lethal means and suicide prevention, including safe storage.
- Educate healthcare professionals about the importance of lethal means counseling in the treatment of individuals experiencing a suicidal crisis.
- Implement voluntary removal initiatives including temporary transfer exceptions, community storage options, and Voluntary Do-Not-Sell Lists.
- Implement Extreme Risk Protection Orders (ERPOs) as a tool to help prevent suicide when voluntary efforts to separate an at-risk individual from a firearm are unsuccessful or impossible and suicide risk is imminent.
Healthcare Systems
AFSP works to advance policies in healthcare systems that will accelerate the acceptance and adoption of risk identification and proven suicide prevention strategies. By identifying one out of every five people at risk for suicide in large healthcare systems – such as during primary care and behavioral health visits – and providing them with short-term intervention and better follow-up care, an estimated 9,200 lives can be saved through 2025.
- Promote culturally competent training requirements for healthcare providers regarding best practices in suicide prevention, assessment, treatment, and management.
- Create funding opportunities for suicide risk screening and assessment in healthcare.
- Promote safety planning, lethal means counseling, caring contacts, and other best-practice short-term interventions for patients at risk for suicide.
Emergency Departments
Basic screening and interventions can provide a safety net for patients at risk for suicide seen in Emergency Departments (EDs). AFSP is educating emergency medicine providers and collaborating with key accrediting and professional organizations to improve the acceptance and adoption of suicide screening and preventative intervention as the standard in emergency care. By screening one out of five people seen in EDs and providing short-term interventions such as safety planning and follow-up care, an estimated 1,100 lives can be saved through 2025.
- Promote training for ED personnel regarding best practices in suicide prevention for individuals at risk for suicide.
- Create funding opportunities for suicide risk screening and assessment in EDs.
Corrections Systems
AFSP supports screening for and identifying individuals at risk for suicide at key points within corrections systems, such as at entry and exit. Comprehensive care that addresses all aspects of health, including behavioral health, must be delivered to incarcerated populations and individuals within the criminal legal system. Through such policies, an estimated 1,100 lives can be saved through 2025.
- Establish and expand diversionary programs and other initiatives to improve responses to individuals with mental health and/or substance use disorders who come into contact with the criminal legal system.
- Promote policies that assist with the transition to community care for formerly incarcerated individuals, with the goal of reducing recidivism, supporting public safety, and preventing suicide.
- Improve data collection and reporting on suicide in correctional facilities.
- Promote standards that limit the use of solitary confinement and minimize its impact on the mental health of incarcerated individuals, with the goal of ending its use.
- Expand access to suicide prevention programming in correctional facilities including suicide prevention training for corrections officers.