SAFE-T Suicide Assessment Five Step Evaluation and Triage
This two-page resource gives a brief overview on conducting a suicide assessment using a five-step evaluation and triage plan.
Safety Alert: Are you a victim or survivor looking for help? Check out these national, state, and local county resources. Your internet activity can be tracked. If you think someone is monitoring this device, please review these technology safety tips.
This two-page resource gives a brief overview on conducting a suicide assessment using a five-step evaluation and triage plan.
The guide emphasizes the distinctions between 988 and 911, aiming to reduce confusion and ensure timely, appropriate responses to both behavioral health crises and physical emergencies.
This chart maps out risk and protective factors and social determinants of health along various points in the social ecological model.
In this course, you will learn about creating a safety plan with survivors, identifying risks the survivor may face, and connecting survivors with other resources in Michigan and nationally.
In this course, we will discuss the prevalence and effects of sexual abuse & domestic violence on children, perpetrator tactics, how children experience and express their trauma, how to support non-offending caregivers, and how to promote the resiliency and healing of children.
This training was developed and presented by the SASHA (Sexual Assault Services for Holistic Healing and Awareness) Center in Detroit, MI and focuses on working with African American survivors of sexual assault.
This training was developed and presented by ACCESS (Arab Community Center for Economic and Social Services) and focuses on serving Arab Americans. ACCESS is in Dearborn, MI. ACCESS is the largest nonprofit Arab American human services agency in the U.S.
In this course, we will learn how to recognize when doing the work is starting to take a toll, how to get help, and useful individual and workplace practices for caring for ourselves and each other in this work.
In this course, you will learn about the intersectionality principle, privilege and allyship, a brief history of the sexual and domestic violence movement, and more.
In this course, we will explore the advocate’s role and define the guiding principles of advocacy: being intersectional, survivor-centered, trauma-informed.
Please switch to Edge, Chrome, Firefox or Safari to continue.