[ASIST_Network] Research Article: ASIST's Impact on Crisis Center Counselors

NOONAN Donna donna.noonan at state.or.us
Fri Sep 26 11:46:40 PDT 2014


Dear Oregon ASIST Trainers,

>From today's Spark (www.sprc.org<http://www.sprc.org>), an important article about training for crisis center counselors and about the effectiveness of ASIST.  Use this article in your communities to promote ASIST among professional mental and behavioral health providers. I also encourage you to make sure all crisis line staff in your county are trained in ASIST; some counties require it. You can find a list of Oregon county crisis line numbers at County crisis line listing<https://public.health.oregon.gov/PreventionWellness/SafeLiving/SuicidePrevention/Pages/cntymap.aspx>.  The list was updated this month, thanks to our friends at Oregon NAMI. Please pardon cross-postings.


ASIST's Impact on Crisis Center Counselors

Training for telephone crisis counselors should include a strong focus on helping callers explore their reasons for living, helping callers use informal sources of support, and assessing suicide risk, according to the authors of a study comparing National Suicide Prevention Lifeline crisis center counselors who were trained using Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training (ASIST) with counselors who only received each crisis center's standard training.

The research revealed that that callers "were significantly more likely to feel less depressed, less suicidal, less overwhelmed, and more hopeful" by the end of calls handled by crisis counselors who had been trained using ASIST compared to callers who spoke with counselors who had not received ASIST training. These outcomes were associated with the ability of ASIST-trained counselors to keep callers on the telephone longer, explore callers' reasons for living and ambivalence about dying, and discuss the caller's use of informal supports.

At the same time, the ASIST-trained counselors did not engage in more comprehensive suicide risk assessments (by, for example, asking about past suicide attempts or current suicide plans) than other counselors. Nor were they more likely to engage in positive behaviors such as "allowing the caller to talk about his or her feelings/situation," "establishing rapport with the caller," or "showing empathy/validating caller." The authors stress the importance of assessing suicide risk during calls, and note that whether or not they had been trained in ASIST, counselors too often did not include such assessments.

This summary based on: Gould, M.S., Cross, W., Pisani, A.R., Munfakh, J., and Kleinman, M. (2013). Impact of Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training on the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior 43 (6): 676-691.

I believe I sent this information out when the article first came out, but it certainly bears repeating. Let me know if you would like a copy of this article and I'll send it right out.
Best regards,
Donna


Donna G. Noonan, MPH, CHES
Youth Suicide Prevention Coordinator
Oregon Public Health Division
800 NE Oregon, Ste 730
Portland, OR 97232
971-673-1023
donna.noonan at state.or.us<mailto:donna.noonan at state.or.us>

Join the Youth Suicide Prevention Network<http://listsmart.osl.state.or.us/mailman/listinfo/yspnetwork> (YSPNetwork) listserv

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