1. Project Profile
Project Name(s) | WHO START Project |
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Funded Organisation | Griffith University/Australian Institute of Suicide Research and Prevention (AISRAP) |
Geographical Area | Information not provided |
State/Territory | Queensland |
Approach(es) | Universal |
Individual/Group | Group |
LIFE Action Areas |
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Target Groups |
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2. Project Description
The World Health Organization's Suicide Trends in At-Risk Territories (WHO/START) Study is investigating preventative interventions across various countries, cultures and population sub-groups within the Asia-Pacific region, in Italy and Brazil.As a Collaborating Centre for the WHO, AISRAP is managing the WHO/START project within the Western Pacific Region (WPR). Funding under the NSPP was provided to employ a Research Fellow to coordinate the WHO/START study.
The role of the technical coordinator involves:
- Providing methodological advice to all participating locations in the WPR, Italy in Europe, Brazil in South America, involved in START
- Acting as the custodians for the information collected in the WPR, Italy in Europe, Brazil in South America, for the pooled database
- Writing reports, research articles and funding applications on behalf of all participating locations
In the 2011-13 funding period, the objectives of the project are to:
- Establish an effective and reliable monitoring system for both fatal and non-fatal suicidal behaviours in all participating locations in the WPR, Italy and Brazil
- In the Australian context, create a database of presentations seen in Hospital Emergency Departments for suicidal behaviours
- Source age, gender and method of fatal suicide behaviour data from the Queensland Suicide Register (QSR)
- Use the data from the QSR to inform a model of care that is transferrable to participating locations in the WPR, Italy and Brazil
- In the role of technical coordinator, progress work on the pooled international database of fatal and non-fatal suicidal behaviours
3. Activities
In 2011-13 the project is:- Continuing to develop an effective monitoring system for all participants internationally and increasing monitoring study to two additional hospitals in Queensland
- Identifying and assessing the trends of medically dangerous suicide attempts in the hospitals under surveillance
- Validating the data collected in the monitoring study by reviewing all cases presenting over two days in Emergency Departments – this will provide a model of care for all participating countries in the START study Top of page
4. Funding
- Round 1
- NSPP funding
- 2006/07 - $48,600
- 2007/08 - $100,000
- 2008/09 - $39,290
- % project funding - data not supplied
- NSPP funding
- Round 2
- NSPP funding
- 2009/10 - $50,000
- 2010/11 - $50,000
- % project funding - data not supplied
- NSPP funding
- Round 3
- NSPP funding
- 2011/12 - $50,900
- 2012/13 - $51,816
- % project funding - data not supplied
- NSPP funding
5. Staffing
- Round 1 (2006/07, 2007/08, 2008/09)
- Number staff positions funded (FTE) - data not supplied
- Number staff positions filled (FTE) - data not supplied
- Round 2 (2009/10, 2010/11)
- Number staff positions funded (FTE) - 1
- Number staff positions filled (FTE) - data not supplied
- Round 3 (2011/12, 2012/13)
- Number staff positions funded (FTE) - 1
- Number staff positions filled (FTE) - data not supplied