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Suicide Prevention

Suicide Prevention

A purple and teal awareness ribbon surrounded by matching colored hands, hearts, and dots on a light blue background.Suicide is a complex public health challenge involving many biological, psychological, social, and cultural determinants. Suicide is often preventable, and MVSD is committed to investing energy, resources, time, and intent in supporting those on our campus who may be thinking of suicide or know someone who has died by suicide.  This webpage and the resources referenced are intended to instill hope, provide clarity, and foster a deeper understanding of steps to prevent suicide in our youth. 

Where to get help 24 hours a day, 7 days a week

  • Text the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline at  988

            988lifeline.org Website

  • Call 1-800-273-TALK (1-800-273-8255)
  • Text  HOME to 741741 to access the Crisis Text Line 
  • Trevor Project (LGBTQ+): 866-488-7386

           Trevor Project Website

  • SandyHook Promise-Say Something Anonymous Reporting System

           Say Something Website

  • Teen Line: 310-855-4673 or Text TEEN to 839863
  • National Domestic Violence Hotline: 1-800-799-7233

For student family support, please contact your school counselor, school psychologist, or school administrator

    • Research has demonstrated that in over 80% of suicides, warning signs were given.
    • Suicide crosses all socioeconomic backgrounds.
    • Suicide is often preventable. Not every death is preventable, but many are.
    • Suicidal behavior should not be dismissed as "attention-getting" or "manipulative"; it may be a serious cry for help. People who talk about suicide DO kill themselves.
    • We must take every threat seriously.
    • Most suicidal youth do not really want to die; they want to escape their pain and may see no other alternative course of action.
    • Youth who are discriminated against or victimized because of physical differences, sexual orientation, or other reasons are at higher risk for attempting suicide. 
    • Any trained individual can greatly increase the likelihood of a youth getting the help they need and may very well make the difference between life and death.
  • Schools are ideal settings to address the topic of suicide and attempt to prevent adolescent suicide because the school provides an environment capable of reaching the largest number of students and therefore represents the highest likelihood that a student potentially at risk for suicidal behavior will be exposed to a prevention strategy. A plan that implements a systematic approach has the potential to increase both emotional and academic performance stability.

    MVSD’s comprehensive approach to suicide prevention includes establishing policies and procedures, training staff, providing information and in-school support for students, disseminating information to parents and the community, employing screening tools, responding appropriately to suicide attempts and deaths, and capturing data to drive interventions.