Following a review of frameworks at a state, national and international level in Dec 2016, the GCMHSS implemented their Suicide Prevention Strategy 2016-2018. This strategy focused on a service-wide Zero Suicide framework approach to suicide prevention, the first of its kind for a public mental health service in Australia. This framework provides a vital systems approach to suicide prevention within a healthcare setting, with critical components including leadership instilling the belief that suicide can be prevented in people under the care of a health setting, the enhancement of staff skills, attitudes and beliefs through high quality training; a pathway of care that identifies those at risk, the provision of enhanced assessment, treatment planning and risk formulation as well as interventions that directly target suicidality. The pathway incorporates safe transitions of care whilst embedding this within a continuous quality improvement framework, developed within a learning and Just Culture. While a central outcome has been the development and implementation of a Suicide Prevention Pathway, multiple activities and working groups are supporting a broader systems approach to suicide prevention at the GCMHSS.
Partnerships
The GCMHSS collaborated with many individuals and services that includes, Dr Shawn Shea and his development of the Chronological Assessment of Suicide Events approach, Professor Anthony Pisani et al, Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Paediatrics at the Center for the Study and Prevention of Suicide at University of Rochester and the Prevention Orientated Risk Formulation, Barbara Stanley and Gregory K. Brown for the use of their Safety Plan Template.
Partnering with the Queensland Centre for Mental Health Learning (QCMHL) to modify the SRAM-ED training, to support specific training in the SPP, addressing attitudes and beliefs, and supporting skills and knowledge required for implementation of the SPP.
Partnering with the Primary Health Network:
- To commission a non-clinical support service, co-located with the GCMHSS Acute Care Team, to engage with consumers of the SPP, to provide enhanced support for their transition to follow up care in primary care or the private sector.
- For education and training provided to approximately 90 private practitioners providing services to people with suicidality, to familiarize them with the SPP, Safety Planning, Counseling on Access to Lethal Means and the Prevention Oriented Risk Formulation.
- Partnering with the Australian Institute of Suicide Research and Prevention (AISRAP) to investigate Patient reported outcomes.
The project was highly commended in the Delivering Healthcare category at the 2017 Queensland Health Awards for Excellence.