
Healthcare, education, and community professionals are invited to train in EDC's Collaborative Safety Planning, a four-hour online workshop held on July 21st.
Training in Collaborative Safety Planning
This training workshop supports social workers, nurses, peers, counselors, and other healthcare, education, and community staff in collaborative safety planning for suicide prevention, no license required. EDC's Collaborative Safety Planning equips staff with practical, evidence-informed strategies to support individuals of all ages who may be experiencing suicidal ideation, emotional distress, or a mental health crisis.
Overview
Collaborative safety planning is an essential tool in suicide care. It provides a structured approach to help individuals identify warning signs, coping strategies, and sources of support while reducing access to lethal means. Providers who are familiar with best practices in collaborative safety planning and are comfortable actively supporting and creating collaborative safety plans offer a higher quality of care for those at risk.
EDC's training in Collaborative Safety Planning introduces and expands two core, research-based interventions: the Stanley Brown Safety Plan and EDC’s Counseling on Access to Lethal Means (CALM). Together, these strategies provide a concrete framework for any healthcare, education, or community professional to build rapport with individuals and their support persons to implement safety-focused interventions that can reduce suicide attempts and save lives.
Objectives
The goal of this training is to increase confidence and competence in developing and implementing collaborative safety plans with individuals at risk of suicide. The training will strengthen participants’ ability to engage individuals in structured problem-solving and apply protective interventions that prioritize safety. In addition, it will equip participants to effectively counsel on lethal means safety, including firearms and medications, using developmentally appropriate and culturally responsive approaches.
Practical skill-building will be emphasized throughout the session, with structured role-plays, peer feedback, and guided debriefing to ensure participants leave with usable, real-world strategies. At the end of the training, participants will be able to:
- Describe what a collaborative safety plan is, how and when to use it with a person at risk of suicide
- Understand the components and how to complete the steps of a collaborative safety plan
- Explain the association between access to lethal means and suicide, and the role of counseling on access to lethal means in collaborative safety planning
- Increase their skills and confidence to work with people and their families to complete a collaborative safety plan and reduce their access to lethal means
Expertise
EDC is home to the federally-funded Suicide Prevention Resource Center (SPRC) and the National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention and is the training center for Assessing and Managing Suicide Risk (AMSR) and Zero Suicide, a continuous quality improvement framework for healthcare systems. EDC's Collaborative Safety Planning draws upon the Zero Suicide commitment to system-wide transformation toward safer suicide care that has resonated with health systems, schools, and community organizations nationwide.
Questions? Please contact us at solutions@edc.org.

Laurin Jozlin, senior project associate, is a licensed clinical social worker with 10 years of experience in suicide prevention, suicide intervention, community mental health, and child and adolescent mental health.