Passion. Purpose. Collaboration.

Our vision is to unite North Carolina to make suicide prevention a common goal for all residents.

Our Mission

We work with North Carolina families, schools, communities, professional groups, health care professionals, and people with lived experience to:

Suicide is a Major Public Health Concern

1,600+

people died by suicide in North Carolina in 2022

People who face a higher risk for suicide include older white males, Black youth, veterans, and more

See More on the Impact of Suicide

Our Story

The Suicide Prevention Institute was founded in 2022 with a foundational gift from the Starling family. They want to grow and share suicide prevention expertise so we can help communities and families all across North Carolina.

Our Team

The team at Suicide Prevention Institute is interprofessional and has expertise in all areas of suicide prevention. They share a purpose and passion to reduce deaths by suicide in North Carolina. Learn more about who they are.

Our Work

At the Suicide Prevention Institute, a major part of our mission is to reduce deaths by suicide. We use science to guide this work. Science helps us find people who face greater risks of suicide and use strong evidence to guide our interventions.  

The graphic below shows a useful model of suicide prevention. A suicide attempt is like a waterfall in a stream. Prevention work can happen far upstream, near the waterfall, or downstream. Those levels can also be called primary (upstream), secondary (midstream), and tertiary (downstream).

Edit Content

Primary prevention addresses the root causes of suicide. This includes trauma, the ongoing mental health crisis, poor access to health care, and other risk factors.

An image of a stream that shows how suicide prevention happens on three levels -- primary (upstream), secondary (midstream), and tertiary (downstream).

Examples of primary prevention (upstream) strategies include:

Edit Content

Secondary prevention identifies people who face emerging risks. It also intervenes to keep them safe and connects them to the right supports to prevent a suicidal crisis.

An image of a stream that shows how suicide prevention happens on three levels -- primary (upstream), secondary (midstream), and tertiary (downstream).

Examples of secondary prevention (midstream) strategies include:

Edit Content

Tertiary prevention guides the response to suicidal crises. It also promotes approaches to these crises that have connection, dignity, and empowerment (and not fear).

An image of a stream that shows how suicide prevention happens on three levels -- primary (upstream), secondary (midstream), and tertiary (downstream).

Examples of tertiary prevention (downstream) strategies include:

How We Work

Suicide Prevention Institute collaborates with people in all professions and demographics to identify and scale programs that improve suicide prevention. Our work factors in the needs of survivors, families, and other community members who are directly impacted by suicide loss. We build, study, and expand programs at the grassroots level and work hand-in-hand with:

Our Newsletter

Access recent and archived editions of the Suicide Prevention Institute newsletter.

March 2025 - English

March 2025 - Spanish

February 2025 - English

February 2025 - Spanish

January 2025 - English

January 2025 - Spanish

Our Resources

Learn and share information about our work in suicide prevention across North Carolina.

Select Language »

How to Find Help Right Now

If you or someone else needs help right now, do not wait. Use these resources below to get help.

988

Lifeline

Available 24/7/365. Free. Confidential.
Connect to judgment-free counselors who provide compassionate support.

Free and confidential. Available 24/7/365. Staffed by trained crisis counselors who can help you take care of yourself, a friend, or loved one.

Free and confidential. Available 24/7/365. Connect with a real, qualified person who can support veterans and family members. You don’t have to be enrolled in VA benefits or health care to call.

Free and confidential. Available 24/7/365. Trained counselors who understand the challenges LGBTQ+ young people face and provide judgement-free support.

Free and confidential. Available 24/7/365. Exclusively for current and former law enforcement personnel and their families. Staffed by trained and compassionate retired officers.

Free and confidential. Open Monday-Friday from 1:00pm-9:00pm. Staffed by trans/nonbinary peer operators. No nonconsensual active rescue.

Free and available 24/7/365 (English only). Staffed by certified peer support specialists who have personal experiences with mental health or substance use issues.

Free and confidential. Open Monday-Friday from 8:30am-5:00pm. Trained staff and volunteers can help individuals and family members who are impacted by mental health concerns.

Free and confidential. Available 24/7/365. Staffed by trained Community Resource Specialists who can make referrals to verified resources for basic needs such as housing and utility assistance, food, health care, transportation, and more.

Free and confidential. Available 24/7/365 in English and Spanish. It serves individuals and family members who face mental and/or substance use disorders and offers referrals to local treatment options, support groups, and community-based organizations.

Free and confidential. Available 24/7/365 in multiple languages. Staffed by trained counselors and open to anyone who experiences emotional distress related to disasters (survivors, loved ones, first responders, clergy, rescue and recovery workers, and more).

This website uses cookies and similar technologies to understand visitor experiences. By using this website, you consent to UNC-Chapel Hill’s cookie usage in accordance with their Privacy Notice.