• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
NNEDShare

NNEDShare

Communities Exchanging Ideas

  • Innovative Interventions
  • Resource Library
  • About NNEDshare
  • I’d Like to Share
  • NNED.net

SAFE VET: Suicide Assessment and Follow-up Engagement Veteran Emergency Treatment

September 19, 2012

The Suicide Assessment and Follow-up Engagement: Veteran Emergency Treatment (SAFE VET), a brief intervention and intensive follow-up program for suicidal veterans, was found to be extremely acceptable to both veterans and mental health service providers. The intervention also showed promise in helping veterans cope with suicidal crises and seek mental health services following a crisis.

The interventions engage the suicidal patient and the mental health care provider in developing an individualized safety plan based on four evidence-based risk reduction strategies:

  1. means restriction;
  2. problem-solving and coping skills (including ways the patient can distract him- or herself from suicidal thoughts and impulses;
  3. using social support and mental health and crisis services; and
  4. seeking additional mental health treatment.

The plan is tailored to the specific patient and his or her warning signs, favored activities, and social and professional supports. SAFE VET is augmented by intensive telephone follow-up by an acute services coordinator who involves the veteran’s family in this process.

An evaluation of this implementation found that ED and urgent care mental health providers were extremely supportive of the program, as it helped them address the needs of suicidal veterans without hospitalizing them. Prior to the implementation, providers would offer voluntary hospitalization to most suicidal patients for lack of a better option that would ensure patient safety. SAFE VET was also extremely popular among the patients, 93% of whom agreed to participate when offered the opportunity. 80% of suicidal veterans exposed to SAFE VET received mental health services within 6 months of their visit to the VA (compared to 10-40% that other research shows receive such services).

Population of focus: SAFE VET was implemented at five Veterans Administration facilities.

Link to resource: http://ajph.aphapublications.org/doi/abs/10.2105/AJPH.2011.300501?journalCode=ajph&

Reference: Knox, K., Stanley, B., Currier, G., Brenner L, Ghahramanlou-Holloway M, & Brown G. (2012). An emergency department-based brief intervention for veterans at risk for suicide (SAFE VET). American Journal of Public Health, 102(Suppl. 1), S33-37.

Organization: Department of Veterans Affairs, VISN 2 Center of Excellence for Suicide Prevention, Rochester, NY

Date: 2012

Primary Sidebar

Quick Search

  • Reset

Recent Posts

  • Body Project
  • Issue Brief: Co-Occurring Mental Health and Substance Use
  • Practical Guide for Expanding the Community-based Behavioral Health Workforce
  • Vision of You
  • Evidence-Based Guide: Suicide Prevention Strategies for Underserved Youth

Footer

The NNED has been a multi-agency funded effort with primary funding by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA).

It is managed by SAMHSA and the Achieving Behavioral Health Excellence (ABHE) Initiative.

Contact • Join the NNED // Copyright © 2025 NNED