Minnesota’s Suicide Prevention Infrastructure

Minnesota Statute section 145.56 calls for the Minnesota Department of Health (MDH), in partnership with other state agencies and community partners, to review, coordinate, and implement the Minnesota Suicide Prevention Plan; fund community-based suicide prevention; support workplace and professional networks; collect and report data on suicide prevention; and evaluate prevention programs and policies. One critical aspect of this work is the 2023-2027 Minnesota State Suicide Prevention Plan. Minnesota’s state plan is designed to guide the work of the MDH Suicide Prevention Unit, other state agencies, and community partners. The plan provides a framework for people, communities, organizations, and governments to take action to prevent suicide. The plan includes:       

  • An infrastructure improvement plan to help MDH better understand suicide prevention activities across the state and leverage existing rules, programs, and practices in communities​ 
  • Prevention efforts such as the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline, suicide prevention trainings in communities, and the Zero Suicide framework (which focuses on improving suicide care in health care and behavioral health clinics and organizations)   
  • Strategies that individuals, families, and communities can use to contribute to the implementation of the plan, as well as strategies to support groups disproportionately affected by suicide

A second arm of Minnesota’s suicide prevention infrastructure is its funding, which MDH uses to build capacity for effective collaboration and coordination, including through support of the MDH Suicide Prevention Unit. Among other responsibilities, the unit oversees state and federally funded suicide prevention grants and partnerships to support the following efforts: 

  • Regional suicide prevention coordination across the state
  • 988 Minnesota Suicide and Crisis Lifeline
  • Communicating and organizing activities and approaches across MDH, the Minnesota Suicide Prevention Task Force, other state agencies, and local communities to:
    • Create a comprehensive suicide prevention approach
    • Serve groups disproportionately affected by suicide, self-inflicted injury, and suicidal ideation
    • Reduce factors that raise risk and increase factors that promote resilience
    • Develop strategies to understand and respond to the needs of the community

Finally, MDH’s Suicide Prevention Unit strives to provide quality, reliable data about suicide in Minnesota. This includes: 

  • Data to guide planning and decision-making on guidelines, practices, and programs across the spectrum of suicide prevention 
  • Timely and regular updates to those working toward preventing suicide, including the Minnesota State Suicide Prevention Taskforce, the MDH Suicide Prevention Unit, Regional Suicide Prevention Coordinators, Zero Suicide training groups, medical professionals, local public health providers, and community partners
  • Analysis of data broken out by factors like age, gender, and regional differences as available
  • Expanding data collection when needed to monitor and ensure efforts are reaching the people who need them most

You can learn more about Minnesota’s suicide prevention efforts on the Minnesota Department of Health’s Mental Health and Suicide Prevention webpage.

Author: Suicide Prevention Resource Center (SPRC)

Year Published/Updated: 2025

Resource Type: Success Story