Loveland Reporter-Herald

4% rise in suicide reports last year

State AG for first time provides more data on what happens after tips are made

- BY JESSICA SEAMAN THE DENVER POST

The number of potential suicides reported to Safe2tell rose 4% during the 2019-20 school year, according to the Colorado program’s annual repor t, which provides for the first time a more detailed look at what happens after tips are made to the anonymous repor ting system.

Safe2tell recorded 3,821 reports about students at risk of suicide, up from 3,668 such reports during the 2018-19 school year. And in at least 35% of those cases, the student was sent to counseling either in school or with a mental health profession­al, according to informatio­n included for the first time in the program’s annual report.

The increase in suicide reports during the last school year is additional­ly notable because the overall number of reports to Safe2tell declined 7% to 20,822 during that period as students moved to remote learning at the start of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“Coloradans have felt the deep impacts of the pandemic as we navigate these unpreceden­ted times together,” said Essi Ellis, director of Safe2tell, in a statement accompanyi­ng the release of the report Tuesday.

Safe2tell is a statewide anonymous tip line for students to report concerning behavior. It was created to address youth violence in Colorado, but in recent years the program has seen more and more students reaching out to repor t classmates at risk of suicide.

Previously, Safe2tell only provided additional informatio­n about responses by detailing the number of selfreport­ed mental-health tips that were transferre­d to Colorado Crisis Services. But that’s a small fraction of overall reports; in the 201920 school year, Safe2tell received 137 such tips, and of those, 15 were transferre­d to the crisis line.

The release of more detailed data about the outcomes of Safe2tell reports follows reporting by The Denver Post that found little public accountabi­lity about what happens after authoritie­s respond to tips, because of a lack of informatio­n collected by the Colorado Attorney General’s Office, which runs the program. A 2014 state law also limits the public release of such informatio­n.

The Post also reported that while Safe2tell is fielding more repor ts about children and teens at risk of suicide, police are among those acting on the reports — a response that experts said can traumatize students struggling with their mental health.

The data about what happens after Safe2tell reports are received that’s included in the 2019-20 annual repor t has not been made public before. The attorney general’s office declined to provide it to The Post when the newspaper requested it during the reporting of its Crisis Point project over the last year.

Lawrence Pacheco, spokesman for the attorney general, previously told The Post that local authoritie­s “are not required to report this informatio­n to Safe2tell, and the limited informatio­n we have from those agencies that do report is general, incomplete and not useful to gain a broader understand­ing of outcomes.”

In 2018, state lawmakers passed a bill providing Safe2tell funding to hire a data analyst. The legislatio­n also required the program to create an annual report analyzing data from the program, including a summar y of outcomes and actions taken after tips are made to Safe2tell “to the extent the informatio­n is available,” beginning in late 2018.

Safe2tell hired a data analyst in mid-2019, Pacheco said, and is now able to provide a more detailed data summary in its annual repor ts.

State officials have said that when Safe2tell receives tips, they are sent to schools and law enforcemen­t — and it’s up to local officials to decide who and how to respond.

The additional outcome data provided by Safe2tell this year is limited. It doesn’t reveal how often police respond to mental health crises compared to medical profession­als or school officials. It’s also unclear how complete the data is, since the attorney general’s office has said local officials aren’t required to report this informatio­n back to the program.

A tip also can have multiple outcomes. For example, a suicide repor t can lead to a welfare check, parents being notified and mental health counseling.

What the data does show is that of the outcomes that were reported back to the program last school year, at least 2,052 resulted in welfare checks conducted by either school officials or police following a tip about someone at risk of suicide.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States