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Welcome to the home page of the Tennessee Gatekeeper Training Implementation Support System (GTISS)—dedicated to the prevention of suicide across the life span.  We hope this website will help you make the most of gatekeeper training for the prevention of suicide – whether it is through Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training (ASIST), Connect/Frameworks, Question, Persuade, and Refer (QPR), or any other gatekeeper training program.  The tools we have developed can help any organization or community achieve the goal of establishing an effective network of assistance for people who are at risk for suicide.  Contributors to this site have been involved in various aspects of the gatekeeper training process – as trainers, researchers, project managers, and gatekeepers.  The GTISS is our attempt to simplify all we’ve learned from research and experience – and help you put it into practice.

 

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This site is supported by Interagency Agreement No. 05FED28406  from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). Its contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the CDC or SAMHSA.

 

The content for this website is based on implementation and evaluation of the Tennessee Lives Count Project (TLC; 2005-2008) funded by SAMHSA, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (grant #SM57400-02), and the TLC/Juvenile Justice Project (2009-2012; grant #057400-04), also funded by SAMHSA.  The Tennessee Department of Mental Health (TDMH) was the recipient of both grants, made possible through the Garrett Lee Smith Memorial Act of 2004.  The current TLC/JJ project is collaboratively implemented with the Mental Health Association of Middle Tennessee, the Centerstone Research Institute, and the Tennessee Suicide Prevention Network.