Psychiatry High Risk Program

SUNY Upstate Medical University

Program Type

Treatment or Direct Services Program

Cost

$1,001 to $2,500

Evidence Type

Empirically-Defined Evidence

SPRC Comprehensive Approach

Effective Care/Treatment, Care Transition/Linkages, Respond to Crisis, Reduce Access to Means, Life Skills and Resilience, Connectedness

Program or Intervention Summary

The Psychiatry High Risk Program (PHRP) is a recovery-based suicide prevention program for youths and young adults who struggle with suicide ideation or a recent attempt. It was established in 2017 to address rising rates of suicide in Central New York. The program’s goal is to break the cycle of chronicity and to inject hope by laying out a path to recovery. It has received local and national recognition through newspaper articles, presentations at conferences, and advanced publication in the journal Psychiatric Services by demonstrating strong outcomes in reducing rates of hospitalization and severity of depression and suicide ideation. Innovative aspects include specialized treatment for high risk individuals, facilitation of transitions in care, a cohesive health care team that uses a common framework, regular peer consultation, and weekly manual-based psychotherapy (Dynamic Deconstructive Psychotherapy-DDP) aiming for recovery. After independent investigation, DDP had been previously accepted by SAMHSA in 2012 for inclusion in its National Registry of Evidence-Based Programs and Practices for treatment of depression, alcohol use disorder, borderline personality disorder, and parasuicide behaviors.

Type Treatment or Direct Services Program
Setting Community mental health facility
People Mental Disorders
Languages English, Spanish
Study Method Quantitative Design
Implementer Requirement Mental health treatment providers
Training Requirement Yes
Delivery Options Virtual live
Risk and Protective Factors Previous suicide attempt, History of depression and other mental illnesses, Serious illness such as chronic pain, Substance use, Social isolation, Historical trauma, Discrimination, Stigma associated with help-seeking and mental illness, Easy access to lethal means of suicide among people at risk, Effective coping and problem-solving skills, Strong sense of cultural identity, Support from partners, friends, and family, Feeling connected to others, Feeling connected to school, community, and other social institutions, Availability of consistent and high quality physical and behavioral healthcare

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