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Journal Article

Citation

Ballesteros MF, Ivey-Stephenson AZ, Trinh E, Stone DM. MMWR Suppl. 2024; 73(2): 1-7.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2024, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services; Centers for Deasease Control and Prevention; Epidemiology Program Office)

DOI

10.15585/mmwr.su7302a1

PMID

38412112

PMCID

PMC10899087

Abstract

To assist community leaders in public health, mental health, education, and other fields with developing a community response plan for suicide clusters or for situations that might develop into suicide clusters, in 1988, CDC published Recommendations for a Community Plan for the Prevention and Containment of Suicide Clusters (MMWR Suppl 1988;37[No. Suppl 6]:1-12). Since that time, the reporting and investigation of suicide cluster events has increased, and more is known about cluster risk factors, assessment, and identification. This supplement updates and expands CDC guidance for assessing, investigating, and responding to suicide clusters based on current science and public health practice. This report is the first of three in the MMWR supplement that describes an overview of suicide clusters, information about the other reports in this supplement, methods used to develop the supplement guidance, and the intended use of the supplement reports. The second report, CDC Guidance for Community Assessment and Investigation of Suspected Suicide Clusters - United States 2024, describes the potential methods, data sources and analysis that communities can use to identify and confirm suspected suicide clusters, and better understand the relevant issues. The final report, CDC Guidance for Community Response to Suicide Clusters - United States, 2024, describes how local public health and community leaders can develop a response plan for suicide clusters. The guidance in this supplement is intended as a conceptual framework that can be used by public health practitioners and state and local health departments to develop response plans for assessing and investigating suspected clusters that are tailored to the needs, resources, and cultural characteristics of their communities.


Language: en

Keywords

*Suicide; Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S.; Educational Status; Humans; Information Sources; Public Health Practice; United States/epidemiology

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