Crisis Intervention and Teen Suicide

Crisis Intervention Can Prevent Future Suicides

The importance of acute and immediate counseling on traumatic scenes of grief are essential in preventing further damage.  Crisis intervention hopes to lower the immediate trauma and to start the process of mourning in a healthy and safe fashion.  Crisis Intervention is also needed for teens who have contemplated suicide.

Foxnews.com writes in “CDC: Teen Suicide Attempts on the Rise” about the alarming increase of teen suicide attempts.  This only reiterates the importance of good crisis counseling.
Scary statistics from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)  released Thursday revealed that the number of attempted suicides among teenagers  had increased from 6.3 percent in 2009 to 7.8 percent in 2011.
The information comes from the CDC’s 2011 National Youth Risk Behavior Survey  (YRBS), a report designed to find health-risk behaviors among youth and young  adults related to injury and violence, sexual behaviors, alcohol, and drugs.   Along with the increase in attempted suicides, the survey also showed an  increase in teens texting behind the wheel along with an increase in marijuana  use.
Read more: Click here

Crisis Intervention Counseling can help prevent future suicides.   If you know anyone who has suicidal thoughts please get them help!   Crisis intervention is needed.   You might just be saving a life.   Please review our program and click here

AIHCP

Crisis Intervention Training

Crisis Education

Online courses are an excellent way to learn Crisis Intervention. Depending on the type of training you want to achieve you will want to search for an accredited program that focuses on your specialty. Crisis intervention training can be specialized towards non – violent or violent types of crisis’ and can be utilized in several different professionals including; law enforcement, health care providers, educational professionals or medical providers. Online training uses several different formats of instruction to teach the student the techniques and methods used in modern crisis intervention. Most of the guidelines for these certifications are determined through state and local organizations, and pertain to specific careers. Course time-frames can range from a daylong event to several months long. The time-frame normally depends on the guidelines of the state laws. Areas of the training can be for early prevention of crisis escalation, for more immediate threats or both depending on the situation and how it relates to the career field utilizing the training. Please make sure to review what crisis intervention training your guidelines mandate before choosing a program.

Educational Professionals and Crisis Intervention

crisis intervention
A crisis situation can put your world in a real bind. Use crisis intervention to solve it.

Professional educators and teachers alike can play an important role in their students’ lives. Sometimes they can become a confidant or serve as a role model to the child. Many professional educators are learning skills and techniques in  Crisis Intervention to better serve their students and prevent anything from happening to them. Educators and administrators should select a crisis intervention training program that fits their school and demographic needs. Smaller schools may require specialized training in different aspects of crisis’ and vice versa for larger schools as their problems may vary based on locations and lifestyles. This is why choosing the right program will assist educators in providing the best services. In the end, child safety and prevention is paramount to any crisis intervention training program and should be the key factors when deciding on what program to choose because the children’s safety should always be a teacher’s number one concern.

If you are ready to get started with your educational goals then you might want to look at our crisis training program.

Team Training and Crisis Intervention Counseling

Team training is one of the aspects available to those looking to put together a cohesive crisis intervention training program in their community. Most community Crisis Intervention counseling teams include law enforcement professionals, mental health care teams, medical professionals and in some cases school personnel. Offering team training can create a professional team to respond to emergencies and disasters. While individual training can be more focused; team training for crisis intervention can bring together a group of different professionals and use their various strengths to resolve potential issues. Crisis intervention training involves different aspect of crisis aversion and prevention. Team training puts into effect a team building scenario. Since crisis can involve small concerns to large disasters, having a team and a plan in place is important to law enforcement and community services for prevention. Crisis intervention training as a group can be effective in diffusing emergency situations quickly and with little consequences.

crisis intervention counseling
crisis intervention counseling helps prepare first responders for anything.

If you are looking to become a part of a crisis intervention team then you will need to receive the proper training.    Crisis intervention counseling training is a great place to start.  There are plenty of high quality online crisis training certification programs available.   Once you are a certified crisis intervention counselor, you can then help your community be prepared for crisis situations.

Various Types and Styles of Crisis Intervention

Crisis Intervention comes in several forms depending on your individual or company needs. These needs will dictate the type of training and certification that each company will require. Having certified instructor in crisis intervention allows a company to have certified trainers on site to train and instruct new employees or to act as consultants when a question of crisis intervention might need some expert advice. Online training allows staff to review courses and lessons at their own pace. This also allows the staff to take tests and exams online to gain certification. Crisis intervention training is offered a variety of ways to allow for certification and ease in keeping up with new trends by retaking courses after a set period of years for re-certification. Please check with your human resources department or a creditable crisis intervention training institute if you are interested in learning more about crisis intervention training certification.

crisis intervention
Do you have any questions about crisis intervention?

What style of crisis counseling do you feel would best suit you?   It is a matter of personal preference.    You need to see which style fits you the best.    Just remember your education can you save lives.   So make the most of it and get the best education possible.

What is Crisis Intervention Counseling?

Crisis intervention counseling is short term counseling that addresses emergency situations for people in crisis. A counselor will either speak to a person on the telephone (emergency hotline situation) or face to face, but it is better for people in crisis to have the one on one counseling, which allows the counselor to get a better gauge of the client’s demeanor.
It is difficult for a counselor to deal with a crisis over the phone because they cannot read the client’s body language or see the expression on their face; however, hotlines are important because they are a means in which to calm a person down and stop them from taking drastic and irreversible action.

There are many situations that can be considered a crisis for people. These could include:
• A woman who has been beaten once or repeatedly by her spouse. She takes the opportunity to call a crisis line while her partner has left the home, or possibly while he is pounding on the door to try to get to her and hit her again. The counselor can offer telephone support while contacting 911 and dispatching them to the address, if the counselor can manage to extract that information from the client;
• Someone who lives with a person who has a drug or alcohol problem, and they need someone to speak to because they do not know what to do about the problem;
• A person who has lost their job and is facing financial problems, including foreclosure, debt collectors and bankruptcy. Perhaps this person is unable to train for a new job and has no other prospects for employment;
• A teenager who is being bullied at school and is either terrified to go to school, or is thinking of taking their life;
• A man has just found out he has terminal cancer and has two weeks to live. He is unable to tell his family about the situation and needs to speak to someone about it. He is worried about his family and how they will get by in the future without him.
While it is not the role of the crisis counselor to “fix” the problem, they do have an obligation to provide support and explain to the client that the feelings that they are experiencing are completely normal. It is also important to point out to the client that the situation is temporary and that the crisis will eventually pass.
Crisis counselors can help their clients to develop certain skills that allow them to better cope with a situation. By open dialogue and careful discussion, they can help the client to explore various solutions to the problem while helping them to deal with the stress and think in a more positive way. The problem in a crisis situation is that people have complete tunnel vision, and they forget that there are other aspects to their life that are positive.
When a person is suicidal, they are only thinking of the current situation and how to get out of it. They are probably not thinking very clearly, and they are certainly not considering the effect that their death would have on others around them, such as guilt and remorse. The counsellor would point out all of those things to the client and help them to think of other ways to work through the situation.
People in crisis can learn skills that give them the ability to recover from their situation, but it is up to the crisis counselor to provide them with the guidance and resources to accomplish this. One important aspect of the process is for the counselor to have the client face the crisis head on, and try to move past it. The longer that the situation is prolonged, the less chance that the client has of dealing with it. Sometimes it may be necessary for some sort of confrontation to take place in order for the client to move on with their life. This can be very frightening and difficult, but the counselor is there to assist with the process.
If there is a cycle of behavior that continues to lead to crisis, it is up to the counselor to encourage the client to recognize and change that behavior. One very good example of this would be a drug or alcohol addiction and the cycle of destruction that goes with the addiction. The client is routinely causing extreme emotional pain to those around them, but they refuse to take responsibility for their part in the crisis. The counselor works with the client to break those cycles and heal the pain between the client and their family members and friends. To learn more about crisis intervention, click here.

Crisis Intervention Counseling

Thank you for visiting our AIHCP web blog. This category of the blog focuses on the specialty practice of Crisis Intervention Counseling. Our blog provides our visitors and professional members and students an ever expanding platform for related articles, information, discussions, event announcements and much more. We invite your participation by posting comments, information, sharing and authoring for our blog. Please visit us often and be sure to book mark us!

Trying to recover from PTSD can be delayed over distortions about the event. Licensed counselors through Cognitive Restructuring can help individuals find the truth to move forward. Please also review AIHCP's Crisis Intervention Program

 

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