Evidence-Based Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training (ASIST) Coming to Ellsworth and Machias

For Immediate Release Please

Date: October 8, 2021

Program Contact: Tara Young, Healthy Acadia, tara@healthyacadia.org,  (207) 812-2090

Media Contact: Tracey Carlson, Healthy Acadia, tracey@healthyacadia.org, (207) 667-7171

Evidence-Based Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training (ASIST) Coming to Ellsworth and Machias

Healthy Acadia will offer Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training (ASIST) for interested individuals ages 16 years and older. The two-day course will be offered October 19-20, 2021, at the Church of God, 53 Christian Ridge Rd, Ellsworth. A course will be offered in Machias, November 3-4, 2021, at University of Maine at Machias (9 O’Brien Ave). Classes will meet from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day.

ASIST is an evidence-based curriculum from Living Works Education focused on intervention. Participants will learn how to safely engage with community members who are having thoughts of suicide to help them find “safety for now” and assist them in accessing community-based resources and supports. Participants will also learn how to use language which does not perpetuate stigma associated with having thoughts or feelings about suicide, understand the prevalence of suicidal thoughts and actions in our community, and connect with community resources. Another important aspect of the training will be prevention - working to build a suicide-safer community by learning warning signs for suicide and how to integrate resilience and connection to prevent thoughts of suicide in our community.

 “To date, over one million people have been trained in ASIST,” said Tara Young, Healthy Acadia’s Drug-Free Communities Coordinator and certified ASIST trainer. “Many more are needed to help ensure our communities are doing everything we can to intervene and provide help for people who are having thoughts of suicide.”

 “ASIST training takes away the taboo to enable discussions about suicide, and teaches effective intervention techniques,” said Daniel Jones, a certified ASIST trainer who serves as co-lead pastor alongside his wife, Nicole, at Christian Ridge Church of God. “For me, I have struggled with thoughts of suicide in the past… and one [thought] is just one too many, so if we can help make a more suicide-aware or safe community… it’s worth it!”

 The ASIST training treats suicide as the public health issue that it is. ASIST training is comparable to CPR training – anyone in the community may be in a position to render CPR, and may have no other medical training, or they may be a doctor or a nurse. ASIST is similarly versatile. Any individual aged 16 and older, including teachers, students, doctors, mental health professionals, parents, and others, can become ASIST-trained.

 “We have offered this training for over ten years,” said Young. “Every time we’ve held an ASIST class, at least one participant tells us that they used what they learned to help a friend, co-worker or family member and that the person they helped told them, ‘You saved my life.” 

 For more information, or to register, please contact Tara Young at (207) 812-2090 or email tara@healthyacadia.org.

To make a donation to support the sustainability of ASIST training in our communities, go to  bit.ly/support-asist

Healthy Acadia is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization that engages in a broad range of initiatives to build healthier communities and make it easier for people to lead healthy lives across Washington and Hancock counties, Maine. Learn more at www.healthyacadia.org.

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