Far too many people are at risk of serious injuries and mental health challenges. Suicide is the 10th leading cause of death in the United States. Among infants and children, ages 0–19, injuries and violence result in over 9 million emergency room visits a year. Worldwide, the toll of domestic violence and community violence continues from one generation to the next.
EDC develops strategies, supports professionals and communities, and catalyzes action to address these urgent public health priorities. We work across international, national, state, and local boundaries to integrate evidence-based injury, suicide, and violence prevention into public health and health care systems. We gather and use data to inform policies, programs, and practices so that efforts are tailored to the populations and communities where needs are the greatest—and where the greatest impact can be achieved. In all of this work, we actively engage people with lived experience and promote equity.
Through our work to support well-being amid crisis and conflict and our leadership of initiatives, such as the Zero Suicide Institute, the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention, H.O.P.E, Education & Wellbeing, and the Children’s Safety Network, we seek to prevent harm, to support those who are struggling, to transform outcomes, and to ensure all people thrive.
Learn more: Read or download A World Free from Suicide.
Related Content
New Developments from the Zero Suicide Institute at EDC
Explore our work to support systems of care in adopting and sustaining continuous quality improvement practices that transform suicide prevention and treatment.
New Developments from the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention at EDC
Catch up on the Action Alliance’s initiatives and explore their wide array of toolkits, reports, fact sheets, archived learning events, and more.
New Developments from the Children’s Safety Network at EDC
Visit the Children’s Safety Network at EDC website for the latest news about their learning events, upcoming presentations, and resources.
Zero Suicide: What About Treat?
Learn about Zero Suicide, a quality improvement framework that transforms system-wide suicide care, in this editorial by Julie Goldstein Grumet and David A. Jobes.
A Multi-Tiered Approach to Promoting SEL
Read this Edutopia article by EDC’s Shai Fuxman to learn about a coordinated approach to ensuring all students have the support they need.
State Suicide Prevention Infrastructure
Use these recommendations developed by EDC suicide prevention specialists to help you identify and strengthen key elements of suicide prevention infrastructure in your community.
Community-Led Suicide Prevention Toolkit
Check out EDC’s community suicide prevention toolkit to help your community take a comprehensive approach to promoting mental health and preventing suicide.
Taking a Stand Against Suicide
Learn how to use an APHA policy statement to increase support for suicide prevention advocacy efforts in this article by EDC’s Dr. Kristen Quinlan and colleague Dr. Emily Schmied.
Suicide is Rising Among Younger Students—Here’s How Schools Can Prevent Tragedy
Explore insights on stressors for children, as well as the impact of disparities in mental health equity and discipline on children, in this article featuring the perspectives of EDC’s Ellyson Stout.
Preventing Suicide in Schools: A Systemwide Approach
Find out about six key steps that help schools create a systemwide approach to school suicide prevention in this article by Shawna Hite-Jones and Julie Goldstein Grumet.
Projects
Resources
Here are a few of our resources on injury, violence, and suicide prevention. To see more, visit our Resources section.
This website helps suicide prevention professionals—both individuals and organizations—develop messages about suicide that are strategic, safe, and positive.
This resource library contains reports, analyses, surveys, and fact sheets developed as part of EDC’s administration of the MetroWest Adolescent Health Survey from 2006 to 2014.
This is an organizational fact sheet detailing the National Officer Safety Initiative project.
Education Development Center (EDC), with funding from the Office for Victims of Crime, has developed the self-guided training manual H.O.P.E.: Suicide Training for Crime Victims.
Education Development Center (EDC), with funding from the Office for Victims of Crime, has developed the self-guided training manual H.O.P.E.: Suicide Training for American Indian and Alaska Na
To promote optimal development, each Head Start program plans, implements, and evaluates actions that provide safe environments for children to be active and competent learners.
The Bullying Prevention Resource Guide provides links to organizations, programs, publications, and resources focused on bullying prevention. It is divided into seven sections:
An engaging conversation which combines the expertise of a clinician with the perspective of a police chief, this webinar recording provides guidance on Comprehensive Strategies for Preventing
This issue brief, which EDC developed with Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) funding and in collaboration with the National Consortium on Preventing Law Enforcement Suicide, outlines the current state of knowledge regarding suicide in law enforcement. The authors describe risk and protective factors, challenges to suicide prevention, strategies and best practices, and existing knowledge gaps.
This resource library contains programs and strategies for addressing school-based health and safety issues, including bullying, substance abuse, mental health, and school discipline.