LIVE LIFE Initiative for Suicide Prevention

Each year, more than 700 000 people end their own life – each death a tragedy, with far-reaching impact on families, friends and communities. Much can be done to prevent suicide at the individual, community and national levels. LIVE LIFE is a WHO initiative to support countries to advance political will, national strategic action, and serve as a catalyst for governments to take evidence-based action to prevent suicide. By implementing LIVE LIFE evidence-based interventions for suicide prevention and underlying cross-cutting pillars, many lives could be saved.

The LIVE LIFE implementation guide, developed as part of this initiative, provides technical guidance for the delivery of four key effective and evidence-based multisectoral interventions and six cross-cutting foundational pillars for suicide prevention.

The WHO LIVE LIFE interventions are:

Limiting access to the means of suicide

Interacting with media for responsible reporting of suicide

Fostering socio-emotional life-skills in young people

Early identification and support to everyone affected by suicide and self-harm

The implementation of these interventions is supported by the following cross-cutting pillars:

  • situation analysis
  • multisectoral collaboration
  • awareness raising and advocacy
  • capacity building
  • financing
  • surveillance, monitoring and evaluation
The LIVE LIFE interventions can be integrated into health, community and other settings, and function as a starting point to build a multi-level, multi-sectoral approach to suicide prevention.

 

Publications

LIVE LIFE: An implementation guide for suicide prevention in countries

More than 700 000 people lose their life to suicide every year. The world is not on track to reach the 2030 suicide reduction targets. WHO advocates for...

national_suicide_prevention_strategy_publication

National suicide prevention strategies are essential for elevating suicide prevention on the political agenda. A national strategy and associated action...

WHO Policy Brief on the health aspects of decriminalization of suicide and suicide attempts

Reducing the global suicide mortality rate by a third by 2030 is a target of both the UN Sustainable Development Goals and the WHO Global Mental Health...

suicide_attempts_surveillance_systems_manual

This practice manual aims to provide a tool for countries to use in setting up a public health surveillance system for suicide attempts and self-harm cases...

Preventing suicide: a community engagement toolkit

Communities have an important role to play in suicide prevention. They can provide support to people who are vulnerable and to those who have made an attempt...

Preventing suicide: a resource for media professionals, update 2023

There is evidence that media reports about suicide can enhance or weaken suicide prevention efforts. Widely disseminated stories of death by suicide are...

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