Mental Health Ministries' current e-spotlight focuses on suicide prevention and addiction recovery.
World Suicide Prevention Day - September 10
September is National Recovery Month
The September e-Spotlight features resources on suicide and recovery. With a number of high profile persons dying by suicide, the national media is giving coverage to the alarming facts about suicide and addressing suicide prevention. Suicide now takes more lives annually than car accidents. The CDC has reported that deaths by suicide are up 25% since 1999 and the largest increase in suicide is middle age persons between the ages of 45-64 and among white women.
To help educate our faith communities about suicide, Mental Health Ministries has put together a section with a wide variety of print and media resources on spirituality/faith and suicide. These are available under the Resource list on our website.
If you or someone you know is contemplating suicide, call the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 1-800-273-TALK (8255).
National Suicide Prevention Awareness Week -
September 9-15
World Suicide Prevention Day - September 10
National Day of Prayer for Faith, Hope & Life
For more information watch a short two minute video on this initiative.
Brochure - Suicide: How Faith Communities Can Provide Hope and Promote Healing
Resources on Faith Communities and Suicide Prevention: Suicide Prevention Resource Center (SPRC)
How Faith Communities Can Take Action
- The best way to prevent suicide is to use a comprehensive approach that includes these key components:
- Promote emotional well-being and connectedness among members of your faith community
- Identify people who may be at risk for suicide and assist them in getting help
- Be prepared to respond to a suicide death and provide support to the survivors
- For a wide variety of resources, articles, books and videos, visit the Suicide Prevention Resource Center.
The Suicide Prevention Resource Center put together a comprehensive resource guide, The Role of Faith Community Leaders in Preventing Suicide, through a grant with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administrations (SAMHSA). It provides basic information to help faith community leaders recognize and respond to people who may be suicidal or at high risk. It also contains a list of relevant resource materials and organizations. This guide is available as a PDF file from the SPRC at or on the Mental Health Ministries website under the Suicide section.
Mental Health Ministries DVD - Suicide: Healing After the Death of a Loved One
This show is available on the DVD, PTSD, Trauma and Suicide: Stories of Healing and Hope.
Article - Help Your College Student Combat a Major Danger: Depression
Brochure - Mental Illness and College Students
For many college students the first time they are away from home is when they enter higher education. The college experience is challenging for all students as they navigate through making new friends, achieving academic success, establishing their identity, learning to live independently, and planning their futures. Available in English and Spanish.
Resource Guide - The Role of Faith Communities in Suicide Prevention: A Guidebook for Faith Leaders
Video - Fierce Goodbye: Living in the Shadow of Suicide
Book - Suicide Pastoral Responses
Resource Guide - After Suicide: A Toolkit for Schools
"A student suicide has a tremendous impact on the entire school as well as the broader community. School administrators, faculty, and staff are called on to provide leadership and strength to students and their families, even though they themselves may be shaken emotionally and unsure of the proper actions to take. They will be grappling with issues such as immediate crisis response, helping students and parents cope, and communicating with the school and wider community, as well as the media. After a Suicide: A Toolkit for Schools, developed by the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention and the Suicide Prevention Resource Center, is a valuable guide to help school personnel prepare for the tumultuous and stressful aftermath of a student suicide and to help prevent future tragedies."
Available on the MHM Website in the Suicide Resources Section.
Resource Guide - After a Suicide: Recommendations for Religious Services and Other Public Memorial Observances
Resources for Suicide Prevention, Intervention and Postvention
Muslim Resource Guide - Suicide Prevention
A variety of resources are included on their website. The guide, Suicide Prevention can be found here. A downloadable PDF file is also available on the Mental Health Ministries website in the Suicide section.
"Whoever saves one life, it is written as if they have saved all of humanity."
[Qur'an 5:32]
Book - The Lifesaving Church: Faith Communities and Suicide Prevention
- A video with more information about the book is available on YouTube.
- A study guide to accompany the book is available.
- Book available at Chalice Press.
According to some studies, depression afflicts between 6% and 12% of American high school students. Depression in children and adolescents is easily missed unless parents, teachers, and medical personnel recognize its signs and symptoms. Without the ability to recognize these symptoms, the first inkling a parent may have of the severity of a child's illness is the tragedy of a completed suicide. Families and professionals review symptoms and recommend appropriate actions to take when it is suspected that a child or adolescent is at risk.
The full show is available on the Mental Health Ministries DVD set, Mental Illness and Families of Faith: How Congregations Can Respond or on YouTube. A short clip excerpted from the complete show can also be viewed on YouTube.
Lutheran Suicide Prevention Ministry
Video - What Faith Communities Can Do to Help Prevent Suicide
The Lutheran Suicide Prevention Ministry and Sherry Bryant have produced an informative video that can be a good discussion starter on what faith communities can do to prevent suicide.
Book - A Relentless Hope: Surviving the Storm of Teen Depression
In A Relentless Hope, Dr. Gary Nelson uses his experience as a pastor and pastoral counselor to guide the reader through an exploration of these and many other questions about depression in teens. He's worked with many teens over the years offering help to those confronted by this potentially devastating illness. The author also uses the story of his own son's journey through depression to weave together insights into the spiritual, emotional, cognitive, biological, and relational dimensions of teen depression. Available at survivingteendepression.com
Gary also has an educational video to use with teenagers, "Teen Depression & Suicide: Teens Surviving the Storm", about depression and suicide.
September is National Recovery Month
Each September, SAMHSA sponsors National Recovery Month (Recovery Month) to increase awareness and understanding of mental and substance use disorders, and celebrate the individuals living in recovery. Now in its 29th year, the 2018 Recovery Monthobservance focuses on urban communities, health care providers, members of the media, and policymakers, highlighting the various entities that support recovery within our society.
The 2018 Recovery Month theme, "Join the Voices for Recovery: Invest in Health, Home, Purpose, and Community," explores how integrated care, a strong community, sense of purpose, and leadership contributes to effective treatments that sustain the recovery of persons with mental and substance use disorders. The 2018 observance also aims to increase awareness and encourage audiences to take advantage of the increased dialogue around behavioral health needs and the increased emphasis on tackling our nation's opioid crisis.
The observance will work to highlight inspiring stories that help thousands of people from all walks of life find the path to hope, health, and wellness. In addition, the materials support SAMHSA's message that prevention works, treatment is effective, and people can and do recover. For helpful information and resources visit recoverymonth.gov
Recovery Month Toolkit
Each year, Recovery Month creates a toolkit to help individuals and organizations increase awareness of the power of recovery. The kit provides tips and resources for planning Recovery Month events and distributing information in communities across the nation.
Download the complete 2018 Recovery Month Toolkit.
Mental Health Ministries Video - Addiction and Depression
Addiction and Depression shares how addiction to alcohol and/or drugs often masks an underlying depression. The link between addiction and depression can cause a downward spiral leading to severe health problems, especially suicide. Three persons share their stories of addiction and depression that end in recovery. The full show is available on the Mental Health Ministries DVD set, Mental Illness and Families of Faith: How Congregations Can Respond and on YouTube.
Training Guide - Preventing Alcohol and Drug Problems: A Course for Clergy
This handbook created by NACoA's Clergy Education and Training Project® for SAMHSA's Center for Substance Abuse Prevention, provides some basic information on alcoholism and addiction, the impact of parental addiction on children, facts about adolescent alcohol and drug use, and prevention strategies. It also has an appendix with handouts for use with children of alcohol and drug dependent parents.
Preventing Alcohol and Drug Problems: A Course for Clergy can be found here.
Article - Faith and Religion in Recovery
Over the past century we've seen myriad medications, therapy modules and self-help routines developed to battle the problem. Faith and spirituality remain among the most time-tested supplements in the world of addiction treatment and provide a core value for many rehab facilities and community support groups that yield success stories." Article can be found here.
Snippets from Susan
Letting go of the need to control our spiritual path is especially helpful in the dark night because in these times we do not choose a path. We experience the path as given. Walking in trust, along the path that is given, is our way of saying yes to God. (Sondra Cronk)
Rev. Susan Gregg-Schroeder
Coordinator of Mental Health Ministries
www.MentalHealthMinistries.net
Gary also has an educational video to use with teenagers, "Teen Depression & Suicide: Teens Surviving the Storm", about depression and suicide.
September is National Recovery Month
Each September, SAMHSA sponsors National Recovery Month (Recovery Month) to increase awareness and understanding of mental and substance use disorders, and celebrate the individuals living in recovery. Now in its 29th year, the 2018 Recovery Monthobservance focuses on urban communities, health care providers, members of the media, and policymakers, highlighting the various entities that support recovery within our society.
The observance will work to highlight inspiring stories that help thousands of people from all walks of life find the path to hope, health, and wellness. In addition, the materials support SAMHSA's message that prevention works, treatment is effective, and people can and do recover. For helpful information and resources visit recoverymonth.gov
Recovery Month Toolkit
Each year, Recovery Month creates a toolkit to help individuals and organizations increase awareness of the power of recovery. The kit provides tips and resources for planning Recovery Month events and distributing information in communities across the nation.
Download the complete 2018 Recovery Month Toolkit.
Mental Health Ministries Video - Addiction and Depression
Addiction and Depression shares how addiction to alcohol and/or drugs often masks an underlying depression. The link between addiction and depression can cause a downward spiral leading to severe health problems, especially suicide. Three persons share their stories of addiction and depression that end in recovery. The full show is available on the Mental Health Ministries DVD set, Mental Illness and Families of Faith: How Congregations Can Respond and on YouTube.
Training Guide - Preventing Alcohol and Drug Problems: A Course for Clergy
Preventing Alcohol and Drug Problems: A Course for Clergy can be found here.
Article - Faith and Religion in Recovery
Snippets from Susan
Rev. Susan Gregg-Schroeder
Coordinator of Mental Health Ministries
www.MentalHealthMinistries.net
STAY CONNECTED:
DisAbility Ministries Committee of the UMC
P.O. Box 8041
Spokane, Washington 99203, United States
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