(a) Purpose. The purpose of the model suicide prevention,
intervention, and postvention policy is to:
(1) Protect the health and well-being of children in
an agency's care by implementing procedures to prevent suicide, including
screening and assessment procedures for risk of suicide;
(2) Require intervention when a child attempts or dies
by suicide; and
(3) Address the needs of children in an agency's care,
employees, caregivers, and adoptive parents after a child attempts
or dies by suicide.
(b) Definitions.
(1) Postvention--Activities that promote healing and
reduce the risk of suicide by a person affected by the suicide of
another.
(2) Protective factors of suicide--Characteristics
that make it less likely that a child will consider, attempt, or die
by suicide, including:
(A) Effective behavioral health care;
(B) Connectedness to individuals, family, community,
and social institutions;
(C) Supportive relationships with caregivers;
(D) Problem-solving skills, coping skills, and ability
to adapt to change;
(E) Self-esteem or sense of purpose; and
(F) Cultural or personal beliefs that discourage suicide.
(3) Risk factors of suicide--Characteristics or conditions
that increase the chance that a child may consider, attempt, or die
by suicide, including:
(A) A prior suicide attempt;
(B) Knowing someone who died by suicide, particularly
a family member, friend, peer, or hero;
(C) Access to lethal means;
(D) History of childhood trauma, including neglect,
physical abuse, or sexual abuse or assault;
(E) A history of being bullied;
(F) A mental health diagnosis, particularly depressive
disorders and other mood disorders;
(G) Abuse of alcohol or drugs;
(H) Social isolation;
(I) Severe or prolonged stress;
(J) Chronic physical pain or illness;
(K) Loss of a family member; or
(L) The ending of a relationship.
(4) Suicide contagion--Exposure to suicide or suicidal
behaviors within a family, or from friends or media reports, that
can result in an increase in suicide or suicidal behaviors.
(5) Suicide risk assessment--A comprehensive evaluation
of a child by a medical health professional to confirm suspected suicide
risk, estimate the immediate danger to the child, and decide on a
course of treatment and a plan for intervention to ensure the child's
safety.
(6) Suicide risk screening--A procedure in which a
standardized instrument is used to identify children who may be at
risk of suicide. The screening may be done orally (with the screener
asking questions), with pencil and paper, or using a computer.
(7) Warning signs of suicide--Indicators that a child
may be in danger of suicide and need help, including:
(A) Talking about wanting to die or to hurt or kill
oneself;
(B) Looking for a way to kill oneself;
(C) Being preoccupied with death in conversation, writing,
or drawing;
(D) Talking about feeling hopeless or having no reason
to live;
(E) A change in personality;
(F) Giving away belongings;
(G) Withdrawing from friends and family;
(H) Having aggressive or hostile behavior;
(I) Neglecting personal appearance;
(J) Running away from home or a residential placement;
or
(K) Risk-taking behavior, such as reckless driving
or being sexually promiscuous.
(c) Prevention--Training.
(1) Employees and foster parents must complete at least
one hour of suicide prevention training as follows:
(A) Employees must complete the training annually;
(B) Foster parents verified to care for children five
years of age or older must complete the training:
(i) Within a year of verification; and
(ii) every two years thereafter; and
(C) The suicide prevention training must meet the instructor
and documentation requirements of Subchapter F, Division 7 of this
chapter (relating to Annual Training).
(2) The curriculum for the suicide prevention training
in paragraph (1) of this subsection must include:
(A) The risk factors, protective factors, and warning
signs of suicide;
(B) Understanding safety planning, including:
(i) How safety plans are created;
(ii) How safety plans are shared with employees and
caregivers;
(iii) How safety plans are expected to be implemented
by employees and caregivers; and
(iv) Each employee's or caregiver's role in the prevention
of suicide, including never leaving a child alone if the suicide risk
screening finds that the child is a high risk for suicide, until a
mental health professional conducts a suicide risk assessment; and
(C) Understanding suicide screening, including clarifying:
(i) Each person's role in the screening process;
(ii) When an employee or caregiver should initiate
a suicide risk screening for a child; and
(iii) What actions an employee or caregiver must take
to initiate a suicide risk screening for a child.
(3) The agency must promote suicide prevention training
for non-employees, as appropriate.
(d) Prevention--Suicide Risk Screening.
(1) The policy must describe the suicide risk screening
tool that you will use and the process for implementing the screenings.
(2) The suicide risk screening tool must be supported
by evidence-based research demonstrating the tool performs reliably
regardless of who administers the tool or performs the scoring or
rating.
(3) Any person who meets the conditions and training
requirements of the screening tool manual or instructions may administer
the suicide risk screening to a child. You must document that any
person conducting a screening meets the conditions and training requirements.
(4) For children receiving foster care services, the
screening tool must be administered:
(A) At admission for each child 10 years of age or
older;
(B) At admission for each child younger than 10 years
of age if:
(i) The information provided to the operation at the
time of admission indicates that the child has a history of suicide
attempts or suicidal thoughts; or
(ii) The parent who admits the child, a foster parent,
or child-placing agency requests a screening to be administered because
of the child's risk factors or warning signs of suicide;
(C) Every 90 days after admission for all children
10 years of age or older; and
(D) Immediately for a child of any age whenever the
child exhibits warning signs of suicide that necessitate a suicide
screening be conducted, including when requested by a foster parent.
(5) For children receiving adoption services, the screening
tool must be administered immediately for a child of any age whenever
the child exhibits warning signs of suicide that necessitate a suicide
screening be conducted, including when requested by an adoptive parent.
(6) Any screening must be performed in a manner that
protects the child's privacy.
(7) Each screening must be documented in the child's
record.
(e) Intervention--Based on the Results of a Suicide
Risk Screening.
(1) If the suicide risk screening finds the child to
be a high risk for suicide, the agency, caregiver, or adoptive parent
must:
(A) Immediately refer the child to a mental health
professional for a suicide risk assessment;
(B) Not leave the child alone until a mental health
professional assesses the child;
(C) Remove any harmful objects, chemicals, or substances
that a child could use to carry out a suicide attempt;
(D) Alert each person responsible for the child's care
or supervision of the high risk for suicide and any new or updated
safety plan; and
(E) Upon conclusion of the risk assessment, follow
through on recommendations by the mental health professional and update
the child's safety plan and service plan accordingly.
(2) If the suicide risk screening finds the child to
have a potential for risk of suicide, the agency, caregiver, or adoptive
parent must:
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