Considering the importance of ‘Communities of Practice’ and Health Promotion Constructs for Upstream Suicide Prevention
Lisa Wexler, Joel Ginn, Lauren White, Tara Schmidt, Suzanne Rataj, Caroline C. Wells, Katie Schultz, Eleni A. Kapoulea, Diane McEachern, Patrick Habecker, Holly Laws

TL;DR
This study explores how community-based approaches and self-efficacy can help prevent suicide among Alaska Native youth by leveraging local resources and roles.
Contribution
The study introduces new variables—perceived wellness and prevention self-efficacy and communities of practice—as predictors of suicide prevention behaviors in remote communities.
Findings
Wellness self-efficacy and communities of practice are linked to collaborative prevention behaviors.
Prevention self-efficacy is associated with reducing access to lethal means.
Involving community and institutional roles improves suicide prevention outcomes.
Abstract
Suicide is a serious and growing health inequity for Alaska Native (AN) youth (ages 15–24), who experience suicide rates significantly higher than the general U.S. youth population. In low-resourced, remote communities, building on the local and cultural resources found in remote AN communities to increase uptake of prevention behaviors like lethal means reduction, interpersonal support, and postvention can be more effective at preventing suicide than a risk-referral process. This study expands the variables we hypothesize as important for reducing suicide risk and supporting wellbeing. These variables are: 1) perceived suicide prevention self-efficacy, 2) perceived wellness self-efficacy, and 3) developing a ‘community of practice’ (CoP) for prevention/wellness work. With a convenience sample (N = 398) of participants (ages 15+) in five remote Alaska Native communities, this study…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSuicide and Self-Harm Studies · Mental Health Treatment and Access · Substance Abuse Treatment and Outcomes
