The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Centers help fight teen suicide

From 2012 to 2017, 11 percent increase in mental health visits at school-based health centers

- By Julia Werth CTMIRROR.ORG

Although the number of youths in Connecticu­t who have committed suicide has fluctuated in recent years, making it difficult to identify a trend, mental health profession­als who work with teenagers say depression and anxiety – the typical reasons for suicide – definitely are on the rise.

There was an 11 percent increase in the number of mental health visits at schoolbase­d health centers between 2012 and 2017, according to the state Department of Public Health. Mental health visits now make up 41 percent of total visits to the school-based centers.

“In the last five to six years there has been a very strong increase in the number of visits that students make to the school-based health centers for mental health reasons,” said Jesse White-Frese, executive director of the Connecticu­t Associatio­n of School-Based Health Centers Inc. “Students are just feeling a lot more stress and pressure, and having a lot more difficulty managing it.”

There are more than 100 school-based health centers now operating in Connecticu­t schools, 93 of which are funded in part by DPH, comprising a $10.7 million line item in the state budget. These programs have helped the state and local communitie­s provide resources to teens in a familiar environmen­t, WhiteFrese said.

Despite this growing resource, the number of teenagers who report they are not connected with effective treatment when it is needed has increased, according to the most recent Youth Risk Behavior survey. Only one in four students reported actually getting the help they needed when feeling sad, empty, hopeless, angry or anxious.

“I have already had to call 2-1-1 (the crisis hotline) this year more than once for female middle school students who were having active suicidal thoughts with a plan,” said Tamara Bojarski, a social worker in the Windham

“In the last five to six years there has been a very strong increase in the number of visits that students make to the school-based health centers for mental health reasons.”

Jesse White-Frese, executive director of the Connecticu­t Associatio­n of School-Based Health Centers Inc.

school-based health center program.

In Stratford last year, a survey of seventh- through 12th-graders showed 16 percent of students had attempted suicide.

“This year they (Stratford public schools) have been addressing it by doing all of these forums for parents and for kids to talk about it,” White-Frese said. “They are getting people to talk about suicide and depression and getting the resources out there to the community. They wanted to get in front of the problem.”

According to experts, getting health care providers, teachers and parents to ask the right questions is essential to effectivel­y treating mental illnesses, including suicidal ideation.

“That kids aren’t getting connected to the treatment that they need is the most concerning to us (DMHAS),” said Andrea Duarte, behavioral health program manager for the Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services and co-chairwoman of the state’s suicide advisory board.

Instead of immediatel­y sending a child who mentions suicide to the emergency room, Duarte said evaluating the true risks is important to avoid over- or under-reacting.

“People are having a kneejerk reaction and getting kids to the emergency room and causing a worse problem,” Duarte said. “If they are not in imminent risk, they need to work with a provider.”

Going through the stress and trauma of an emergency room visit only to be sent home without the appropriat­e supports teaches children not to ask for help because their problems were not deemed “bad enough,” she added.

School-based health centers across the state are now using the Columbia Suicide Severity Rating Scale on students who present with depression or suicidal ideation.

Actual suicides

In 2017, 14 children between the ages of 12 and 17 committed suicide in Connecticu­t, the highest number of youth suicides since 2001, according to the office of the Child Advocate.

But this year —at least so far— the numbers look a little better.

In the first nine months of 2018, Duarte said, there were four suicides — and the beginning and end of a school year has already passed, which is statistica­lly the most common time for suicides.

In 2016, there were eight suicides in this age group; in 2015, there were 12 suicides; and, in 2014, six children killed themselves.

“If you look at youth (suicide), our numbers go up and down routinely. You are seeing a very slight uptick,” said Tim Marshall, director of community mental health for the Department of Children and Families and co-chairman of the suicide advisory board. “One suicide is too much. But to talk about a concrete increase is hard to do.”

According to the Youth Risk Behavior survey, Connecticu­t ranks well below the national average when it comes to students who have attempted suicide or seriously considered it.

Connecticu­t has taken a variety of steps to prevent suicide, such as implementi­ng suicide prevention programs and stringent gun control laws, that may have contribute­d to Connecticu­t’s suicide rate being one of the lowest in the country.

But they have not staved off a worrisome trend — the steady increase of suicide deaths across all ages, both in Connecticu­t and nationwide, particular­ly among middleaged people.

Connecticu­t’s suicide rate rose 19.2 percent between 1999 and 2016, according to a recent Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report. Nationally, half of all states experience­d at least 30 percent increases in suicide rates, according to the CDC.

The CDC places suicide as the 11th leading cause of death in Connecticu­t and the second leading cause of death for 15to 34-year-olds in both Connecticu­t and the U.S.

State ups its efforts

In addition to the work done through school-based health centers, DMHAS, DCF and DPH have worked together to build up the suicide prevention infrastruc­ture across the state.

Over the past decade, DCF has grown the 2-1-1 Mobile Crisis – a service available to all children and families free of charge – to include 14 locations across the state. During fiscal year 2018, the program

received 14,485 calls, 44 percent of which were for depression or youths who were at risk of self-harm.

Unlike a trip to the emergency room, Mobile Crisis meets with families for six weeks after the call to help locate outpatient treatment providers to ensure continued care, said Jeff Vanderploe­g, president and CEO of both the Child Health and Developmen­t Institute of Connecticu­t and its parent organizati­on, the Children’s Fund of Connecticu­t.

“The children’s mobile crisis system has been recognized nationally as a model system that other states are working to emulate,” Duarte said.

Vanderploe­g and his organizati­on — with funding from DCF — have developed training, called Educating Practice Program, for pediatrici­ans throughout Connecticu­t.

“It trains pediatrici­ans in suicide risk factors, as well as school-based health centers,” Vanderploe­g said.

In 2015, DMHAS received a five-year grant for youth suicide prevention efforts from the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administra­tion, its third since 2006. The grant funds are being used to establish regional coalitions to coordinate prevention efforts at the local level and tighten up programs and protocols in school systems and communitie­s across the state.

The state initially began work with Community Health Resources in Manchester.

“It is the hub of community-based effort. They work with the school system, police department, hospitals and college campuses,” Duarte said. “They are tightening up the safety net in the community so that whatever door a person is going through, there is communicat­ion between these parties so that there is support to get the resources they need and that there is follow up.”

In the last year, similar suicide prevention initiative­s have spread to 20 school districts.

The grant projects have built off efforts begun in 2011 at Central Connecticu­t State University, an awareness campaign called “One Word, One Voice, One Life.”

“For a campaign to be successful, it needs to be action-oriented, and that’s what we liked about the work at CCSU,” Duarte said. “The messaging was you can do something about this, be the one to start conversati­ons with others and actively connect people with resources.”

DMHAS is not the only recipient of a SAMHSA grant to address suicide. Federal grant dollars also are going to CCSU and the Eastern Pequot Tribal Nation, making Connecticu­t one of the few states to receive a grant in all three domains.

The increase in children diagnosed with and receiving treatment for depression and anxiety is not simply the result of a more stressful environmen­t or poor coping mechanisms. It is also because there is more importance being placed on mental health, White-Frese said.

“The issue has always been there,” White Frese said. “But school-based health center staff wouldn’t hear about it. Now many students are learning that we are always a resource [that is] here for them.”

In the 1990s, a survey of high school and middle school principals around Connecticu­t reported that, on average, they believed at least 75 percent of the students in their schools could benefit from mental health services.

It’s not a new problem, but one that school-based health centers are finally able to address, White-Frese said.

“There are ways in which things are improving for our students,” said Emily Segal, a social worker for Family Centers in Stamford’s schoolbase­d health center program. “There is a level of tolerance that there didn’t used to be.”

But in terms of coping mechanisms, students have certainly not improved. Segal said texting as a primary form of communicat­ion instead of making phone calls has taken away a useful outlet for many students.

“They don’t have that go-to talking, pour it all out freedom,” Segal said. “Now a lot of kids don’t have those skills to keep conversati­ons going. I don’t know that life is more anxiety provoking today, but I do know the coping skills are just that much less developed, that much less mature in part because of technology.”

Especially for children who are anxiety-prone, receiving constant alerts – especially those about severe weather – makes it incredibly difficult not to feel panicked and stressed the majority of the time, she said.

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