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X-WR-CALNAME:The Resilient Veteran
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for The Resilient Veteran
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250925T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250925T150000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20250908T201247Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250924T133136Z
UID:3984-1758808800-1758812400@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Suicide Prevention: Links to Substance Use Disorder Care (SUD)
DESCRIPTION:1 hour \nThis activity is approved for the following credit: ACPE CPE\, AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, ACPE and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nAudience \nThis training is appropriate for mental health professionals\, health care providers\, social service professionals\, and general public community members. \nPresented by Pitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor. \nDescription \nSubstance misuse is a major risk factor for suicide. The SP/SUD course equips participants with the skills to recognize early warning signs of both substance use disorders and suicide\, while exploring the complex interplay between the two. This training emphasizes how stigma can impact both those seeking help and those providing support. Although open to all\, the course is particularly beneficial for mental health professionals\, healthcare providers\, and social service professionals. The curriculum covers essential facts\, key warning signs\, protective factors\, and strategies to address stigma\, along with proactive care approaches and methods to reduce access to lethal means such as firearms and medications. \nLearning Objectives \n\nIdentify and describe the key warning signs and risk factors associated with both substance use disorders and suicide.\nAnalyze the interactions between substance misuse and suicide.\n Describe how stigma affects both help-seeking and support-providing behaviors.\n Implement proactive intervention strategies—such as reducing access to lethal means—to improve outcomes for at‑risk individuals.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2025-09-25-200p/suicide-prevention-links-to-substance-use-disorder-care-sud-9/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/flyer-SUD-sep-25-2025.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20250926T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20250926T150000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20250908T201247Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250908T204639Z
UID:3985-1758895200-1758898800@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Integrating Trauma Informed Care into Suicide Response (ITIC)
DESCRIPTION:1 hour \nThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nAudience \nThis training is appropriate for mental health professionals\, health care providers\, social service professionals\, and general public community members. \nPresented by Pitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor. \nDescription \nThe Integrating Trauma Informed Care into Suicide Response course describes the role of trauma in both risk for suicidal behaviors and in coping with suicide loss. The curriculum covers the SAMHSA principles of trauma-informed care and provides specific trauma-informed strategies to use with individuals at risk for suicide and survivors of suicide loss. \nParticipants will understand the role of trauma in suicide risk and coping with loss\, be able to apply trauma-informed care principles\, and use specific strategies to support survivors of suicide loss. \nLearning Objectives \n\nUnderstand the role of trauma in suicide risk\nLearn the SAMHSA principles of trauma-informed care\nApply trauma-informed strategies when supporting survivors of suicide loss.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2025-09-26-200p/integrating-trauma-informed-care-into-suicide-response-itic-20/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/09/flyer-ITIC-sep-26-2025-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251027T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251027T160000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20251010T204359Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251027T142454Z
UID:4091-1761577200-1761580800@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Integrating Trauma Informed Care into Suicide Response (ITIC)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration2 hours \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity2 hours CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nQPR teaches practical skills that help you become an effective “gatekeeper” who notices warning signs\, starts a caring conversation\, and connects someone to help. You will learn the three core actions: \n\nQuestion: Initiate a compassionate conversation to explore the individual’s thoughts and feelings about suicide.\nPersuade: Encourage the person to seek and accept professional help.\nRefer: Connect the individual with the proper resources and support services.\n\nConcepts are reinforced with clear examples that fit daily life at home\, in clinics\, and in community settings. The training aligns with best practices\, including asking directly about suicide\, using non-stigmatizing language\, and linking to 988 and local resources. Because suicide affects many groups\, including Veterans and their families\, QPR builds confidence to act early\, reduce risk\, and support safety while professional care is arranged. \nOutcomes\nParticipants grow comfortable asking directly about suicide\, increase accuracy recognizing clues and warning signs\, and improve the speed and quality of referrals to crisis and community care\, including 988 and local providers. \nLearning Objectives \n\nRecognize common verbal\, behavioral\, and situational warning signs of suicide\nDifferentiate helpful from unhelpful language when asking about suicide.\nDemonstrate the QPR steps to encourage help-seeking and hope.\nApply a brief referral plan that links to 988 and local resources.\nCollaborate with family\, peers\, and providers to support short-term safety.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2025-10-27-300p/integrating-trauma-informed-care-into-suicide-response-itic-20251027-1500/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/flyer-Oct-27-ITIC-Integrating-Trauma-Informed-Care-into-Suicide-Response-1-of-1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251028T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251028T160000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20251010T204222Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251027T143623Z
UID:4092-1761663600-1761667200@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Suicide Prevention: Links to Substance Use Disorder Care (SUD)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration1 hour \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: ACPE CPE\, AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, ACPE and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity1 hour CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nThis session connects substance use and suicide risk in clear\, actionable ways. Participants will review key facts\, treatment gaps\, including some Veteran-specific considerations\, then focus on “what to do next.” Learn to spot early warning signs\, reduce stigma in conversation and care\, and plan for safety that fits a person’s readiness and resources. We cover warm referral to treatment\, coordination with recovery supports\, and when to consider lethal-means steps within a broader safety plan. Participants leave with practical tools to act early\, improve continuity of care\, and support recovery in community and clinical settings. \nOutcomes\nParticipants identify early risk\, use stigma-reducing language\, plan for safety\, and complete warm referrals that connect people to timely SUD and mental health care. \nLearning Objectives \n\nDescribe early warning signs\, risk factors\, and protective factors across settings.\nRecall connections between SUD prevelance\, treatment gaps\, and links to suicide risk.\nDemonstrate brief\, stigma-reducing conversations that invite help-seeking.\nApply a safety plan that may include lethal-means steps where indicated.\nCoordinate warm referrals and follow-up with treatment andf recovery supports.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2025-10-28-300p/suicide-prevention-links-to-substance-use-disorder-care-sud-20251028-1500/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/flyer-Oct-28-SUD-Resrouces-and-Suicide-Prevention-1-of-1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251029T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251029T150000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20251010T203759Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251014T192120Z
UID:4093-1761742800-1761750000@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Question\, Persuade\, Refer (QPR)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration2 hours \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity2 hours CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nNote: Consider registering for the CALM training offered immediately after this session\, as it complements QPR. \nQPR teaches practical skills that help you become an effective “gatekeeper” who notices warning signs\, starts a caring conversation\, and connects someone to help. You will learn the three core actions:  \n\nQuestion: Initiate a compassionate conversation to explore the individual’s thoughts and feelings about suicide.\nPersuade: Encourage the person to seek and accept professional help.\nRefer: Connect the individual with the proper resources and support services.\n\nConcepts are reinforced with clear examples that fit daily life at home\, in clinics\, and in community settings. The training aligns with best practices\, including asking directly about suicide\, using non-stigmatizing language\, and linking to 988 and local resources. Because suicide affects many groups\, including Veterans and their families\, QPR builds confidence to act early\, reduce risk\, and support safety while professional care is arranged. \nOutcomesParticipants grow comfortable asking directly about suicide\, increase accuracy recognizing clues and warning signs\, and improve the speed and quality of referrals to crisis and community care\, including 988 and local providers. \nLearning Objectives \n\nRecognize common verbal\, behavioral\, and situational warning signs of suicide\nDifferentiate helpful from unhelpful language when asking about suicide.\nDemonstrate the QPR steps to encourage help-seeking and hope.\nApply a brief referral plan that links to 988 and local resources.\nCollaborate with family\, peers\, and providers to support short-term safety.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2025-10-29-100p/question-persuade-refer-qpr-20251029-1300/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/flyer-Oct-29-QPR-Question-Persuade-Refer-Training-1-of-1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251029T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251029T160000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20251010T204111Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251014T192034Z
UID:4094-1761750000-1761753600@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Counseling on Access to Lethal Means Training (CALM)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration1 hour \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity1 hour CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nNote: Consider registering for the QPR training offered immediately before this session\, as it complements CALM. \nCALM teaches respectful\, practical ways to reduce access to lethal means\, especially firearms and medications\, during periods of suicide risk. The session covers when lethal-means counseling is indicated\, how to introduce the topic\, and how to plan safe storage options that fit a person’s values and daily reality. \nParticipants practice language for collaborative problem-solving and learn how to coordinate with families and care teams. The goal is simple\, safer environments for Veterans and all community members while risk is elevated\, with clear next steps for follow-up and return to usual storage when the crisis has passed. Proposed firearm safety solutions respect individuals’ dignity and their second amendment rights. \nOutcomes\nParticipants gain confidence initiating lethal-means conversations\, identify feasible storage options\, and coordinate follow-up with families and care teams to sustain safety. \nLearning Objectives \n\nIdentify when lethal-means counseling is indicated.\nExplain storage options for firearms and medications during elevated risk.\nDemonstrate respectful language that aligns with personal values and legal considerations.\nApply a short safety plan that includes storage\, monitoring\, and follow-up.\nCollaborate with families and providers to review and adjust the plan over time.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2025-10-29-300p/counseling-on-access-to-lethal-means-training-calm-20251029-1500/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/flyer-Oct-29-CALM-Counseling-on-Access-to-Lethal-Means-Training-1-of-1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251114T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251114T140000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20251028T162632Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251028T162643Z
UID:4139-1763125200-1763128800@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Suicide Prevention: Links to Substance Use Disorder Care (SUD)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \n\nDuration1 hour \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: ACPE CPE\, AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, ACPE and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity1 hour CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nThis session connects substance use and suicide risk in clear\, actionable ways. Participants will review key facts\, treatment gaps\, including some Veteran-specific considerations\, then focus on “what to do next.” Learn to spot early warning signs\, reduce stigma in conversation and care\, and plan for safety that fits a person’s readiness and resources. We cover warm referral to treatment\, coordination with recovery supports\, and when to consider lethal-means steps within a broader safety plan. Participants leave with practical tools to act early\, improve continuity of care\, and support recovery in community and clinical settings. \nOutcomes\nParticipants identify early risk\, use stigma-reducing language\, plan for safety\, and complete warm referrals that connect people to timely SUD and mental health care. \nLearning Objectives \n\nDescribe early warning signs\, risk factors\, and protective factors across settings.\nRecall connections between SUD prevalence\, treatment gaps\, and links to suicide risk.\nDemonstrate brief\, stigma-reducing conversations that invite help-seeking.\nApply a safety plan that may include lethal-means steps where indicated.\nCoordinate warm referrals and follow-up with treatment and recovery supports.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2025-11-14-100p/suicide-prevention-links-to-substance-use-disorder-care-sud-20251114-1300/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/flyer-QPR-Training-Nov-14-2025.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251117T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251117T140000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20251028T162236Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251028T162236Z
UID:4140-1763384400-1763388000@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Integrating Trauma Informed Care into Suicide Response (ITIC)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration1 hour \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity1 hour CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nThis training helps attendees understand how trauma can shape suicide risk\, coping\, and engagement before\, during\, and after a crisis. Using SAMHSA’s trauma-informed principles\, we translate concepts into practical steps that create safety\, trust\, collaboration\, empowerment\, and cultural humility. You will learn ways to reduce re-traumatization\, strengthen connection\, and support recovery for Veterans and civilians across settings. The session links principles to actions you can take today\, including language\, environment tips\, and small process changes that improve care and community support. Participants leave with strategies that fit both professional practice and everyday life. \nOutcomes\nParticipants connect trauma-informed principles to suicide prevention\, reduce re-traumatization in conversations and settings\, and improve engagement and follow-through after attempts or losses. \nLearning Objectives \n\nExplain how trauma exposure and responses can influence suicide risk and help-seeking.\nApply SAMHSA trauma-informed principles to real scenarios.\nDemonstrate language and environmental adjustments that increase psychological safety.\nIntegrate peer\, family\, and cultural strengths into safety and recovery plans.\nEvaluate interactions for potential triggers and adapt approach accordingly.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \n  \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2025-11-17-100p/integrating-trauma-informed-care-into-suicide-response-itic-20251117-1300/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/flyer-ITIC-Training-Nov-17-2025.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251119T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251119T150000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20251028T162342Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251028T162411Z
UID:4141-1763557200-1763564400@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Question\, Persuade\, Refer (QPR)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration2 hours \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity2 hours CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nNote: Consider registering for the CALM training offered immediately after this session\, as it complements QPR. \nQPR teaches practical skills that help you become an effective “gatekeeper” who notices warning signs\, starts a caring conversation\, and connects someone to help. You will learn the three core actions: \n\nQuestion: Initiate a compassionate conversation to explore the individual’s thoughts and feelings about suicide.\nPersuade: Encourage the person to seek and accept professional help.\nRefer: Connect the individual with the proper resources and support services.\n\nConcepts are reinforced with clear examples that fit daily life at home\, in clinics\, and in community settings. The training aligns with best practices\, including asking directly about suicide\, using non-stigmatizing language\, and linking to 988 and local resources. Because suicide affects many groups\, including Veterans and their families\, QPR builds confidence to act early\, reduce risk\, and support safety while professional care is arranged. \nOutcomes\nParticipants grow comfortable asking directly about suicide\, increase accuracy recognizing clues and warning signs\, and improve the speed and quality of referrals to crisis and community care\, including 988 and local providers. \nLearning Objectives \n\nRecognize common verbal\, behavioral\, and situational warning signs of suicide\nDifferentiate helpful from unhelpful language when asking about suicide.\nDemonstrate the QPR steps to encourage help-seeking and hope.\nApply a brief referral plan that links to 988 and local resources.\nCollaborate with family\, peers\, and providers to support short-term safety.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2025-11-19-100p/question-persuade-refer-qpr-20251119-1300/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/flyer-QPR-Training-Nov-19-2025.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251119T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251119T160000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20251028T162526Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251028T162526Z
UID:4142-1763564400-1763568000@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Counseling on Access to Lethal Means Training (CALM)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration1 hour \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity1 hour CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nNote: Consider registering for the QPR training offered immediately before this session\, as it complements CALM. \nCALM teaches respectful\, practical ways to reduce access to lethal means\, especially firearms and medications\, during periods of suicide risk. The session covers when lethal-means counseling is indicated\, how to introduce the topic\, and how to plan safe storage options that fit a person’s values and daily reality. \nParticipants practice language for collaborative problem-solving and learn how to coordinate with families and care teams. The goal is simple\, safer environments for Veterans and all community members while risk is elevated\, with clear next steps for follow-up and return to usual storage when the crisis has passed. Proposed firearm safety solutions respect individuals’ dignity and their second amendment rights. \nOutcomes\nParticipants gain confidence initiating lethal-means conversations\, identify feasible storage options\, and coordinate follow-up with families and care teams to sustain safety. \nLearning Objectives \n\nIdentify when lethal-means counseling is indicated.\nExplain storage options for firearms and medications during elevated risk.\nDemonstrate respectful language that aligns with personal values and legal considerations.\nApply a short safety plan that includes storage\, monitoring\, and follow-up.\nCollaborate with families and providers to review and adjust the plan over time.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2025-11-19-300p/counseling-on-access-to-lethal-means-training-calm-20251119-1500/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/flyer-CALM-Training-Nov-19-2025.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251204T083000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251205T163000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20251014T204534Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251204T162739Z
UID:4121-1764837000-1764952200@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training (ASIST) Sponsored By Erie Drug and Alcohol
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration2 Days (8:30 AM – 4:30 PM each day) \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity14 hours CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nErie County Drug and Alcohol is sponsoring this training which will occur in the Human Services Building\, Floor 2:  154 West 9th Street\, Floor 2\, Erie\, PA 16501\n \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nASIST is a two-day\, in-person workshop that teaches a structured intervention model for suicide first aid. Through brief lectures\, video examples\, coached practice\, and supervised simulations\, participants learn to recognize invitations and warning signs\, ask directly about suicide\, and build a collaborative safety plan that connects the person to ongoing supports. The workshop uses a standardized format from LivingWorks\, with trained facilitators who create a safe learning environment for people with varied roles and lived experience. Skills apply across home\, workplace\, and clinical settings\, including support for Veterans and their families. By the end of the workshop\, participants can organize risk information\, strengthen reasons for living\, map resources\, and plan follow-up. ASIST has decades of evaluation and is widely used by health systems\, community organizations\, and first responders. The focus is practical\, repeatable steps that improve confidence and effectiveness. \nOutcomes\nParticipants increase self-efficacy\, improve collaborative safety-planning skills\, and strengthen coordination with family\, peers\, and providers for ongoing support. \nLearning Objectives \n\nAnalyze risk and safety information to understand immediate needs.\nDemonstrate the ASIST intervention model in a simulated interaction.\nDevelop listening and questioning skills that identify person-centered motivations to “turn” individuals toward the future\, life\, and support.\nIntegrate family\, peers\, and community resources into ongoing support.\nEvaluate next steps and arrange active follow-up and warm handoffs.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2025-12-04-830a/4121/
LOCATION:154 West 9th Street\, Floor 2\, Erie\, PA 16501\, 40 W 11th St\, SUITE B-050\, Erie\, PA\, 16501\, United States
CATEGORIES:Erie County,In-person,Professional Development
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/flyer-Q4-2025-ASIST-Dec-4-5-at-Erie-Drug-and-Alcohol-v3.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251210T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251210T153000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20251120T174107Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251120T174107Z
UID:4188-1765377000-1765380600@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Counseling on Access to Lethal Means Training (CALM)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration1 hour \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity1 hour CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nNote: Consider registering for the QPR training offered immediately before this session\, as it complements CALM. \nCALM teaches respectful\, practical ways to reduce access to lethal means\, especially firearms and medications\, during periods of suicide risk. The session covers when lethal-means counseling is indicated\, how to introduce the topic\, and how to plan safe storage options that fit a person’s values and daily reality. \nParticipants practice language for collaborative problem-solving and learn how to coordinate with families and care teams. The goal is simple\, safer environments for Veterans and all community members while risk is elevated\, with clear next steps for follow-up and return to usual storage when the crisis has passed. Proposed firearm safety solutions respect individuals’ dignity and their second amendment rights. \n \nOutcomesParticipants gain confidence initiating lethal-means conversations\, identify feasible storage options\, and coordinate follow-up with families and care teams to sustain safety. \nLearning Objectives \n\nIdentify when lethal-means counseling is indicated.\nExplain storage options for firearms and medications during elevated risk.\nDemonstrate respectful language that aligns with personal values and legal considerations.\nApply a short safety plan that includes storage\, monitoring\, and follow-up.\nCollaborate with families and providers to review and adjust the plan over time.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2025-12-10-230p/counseling-on-access-to-lethal-means-training-calm-20251210-1430/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/flyer-Q4-2025-December-10-CALM-Training-Session.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20251215T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20251215T150000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20251120T174000Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251120T174000Z
UID:4189-1765803600-1765810800@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Question\, Persuade\, Refer (QPR)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration2 hours \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity2 hours CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nNote: Consider registering for the CALM training offered immediately after this session\, as it complements QPR. \nQPR teaches practical skills that help you become an effective “gatekeeper” who notices warning signs\, starts a caring conversation\, and connects someone to help. You will learn the three core actions: \n\nQuestion: Initiate a compassionate conversation to explore the individual’s thoughts and feelings about suicide.\nPersuade: Encourage the person to seek and accept professional help.\nRefer: Connect the individual with the proper resources and support services.\n\nConcepts are reinforced with clear examples that fit daily life at home\, in clinics\, and in community settings. The training aligns with best practices\, including asking directly about suicide\, using non-stigmatizing language\, and linking to 988 and local resources. Because suicide affects many groups\, including Veterans and their families\, QPR builds confidence to act early\, reduce risk\, and support safety while professional care is arranged. \nOutcomes\nParticipants grow comfortable asking directly about suicide\, increase accuracy recognizing clues and warning signs\, and improve the speed and quality of referrals to crisis and community care\, including 988 and local providers. \nLearning Objectives \n\nRecognize common verbal\, behavioral\, and situational warning signs of suicide\nDifferentiate helpful from unhelpful language when asking about suicide.\nDemonstrate the QPR steps to encourage help-seeking and hope.\nApply a brief referral plan that links to 988 and local resources.\nCollaborate with family\, peers\, and providers to support short-term safety.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2025-12-15-100p/question-persuade-refer-qpr-20251215-1300/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/flyer-Q4-2025-December-15-QPR-Training-Session.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260113T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260113T120000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20251217T221825Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251217T221825Z
UID:4225-1768298400-1768305600@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Question\, Persuade\, Refer (QPR)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration2 hours \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity2 hours CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nNote: Consider registering for the CALM training offered immediately after this session\, as it complements QPR. \nQPR teaches practical skills that help you become an effective “gatekeeper” who notices warning signs\, starts a caring conversation\, and connects someone to help. You will learn the three core actions: \n\nQuestion: Initiate a compassionate conversation to explore the individual’s thoughts and feelings about suicide.\nPersuade: Encourage the person to seek and accept professional help.\nRefer: Connect the individual with the proper resources and support services.\n\nConcepts are reinforced with clear examples that fit daily life at home\, in clinics\, and in community settings. The training aligns with best practices\, including asking directly about suicide\, using non-stigmatizing language\, and linking to 988 and local resources. Because suicide affects many groups\, including Veterans and their families\, QPR builds confidence to act early\, reduce risk\, and support safety while professional care is arranged. \nOutcomes\nParticipants grow comfortable asking directly about suicide\, increase accuracy recognizing clues and warning signs\, and improve the speed and quality of referrals to crisis and community care\, including 988 and local providers. \nLearning Objectives \n\nRecognize common verbal\, behavioral\, and situational warning signs of suicide\nDifferentiate helpful from unhelpful language when asking about suicide.\nDemonstrate the QPR steps to encourage help-seeking and hope.\nApply a brief referral plan that links to 988 and local resources.\nCollaborate with family\, peers\, and providers to support short-term safety.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2026-01-13-1000a/question-persuade-refer-qpr-20260113-1000/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/image-qpr.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260113T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260113T130000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20251217T221736Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251217T221736Z
UID:4226-1768305600-1768309200@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Counseling on Access to Lethal Means Training (CALM)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration1 hour \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity1 hour CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nNote: Consider registering for the QPR training offered immediately before this session\, as it complements CALM. \nCALM teaches respectful\, practical ways to reduce access to lethal means\, especially firearms and medications\, during periods of suicide risk. The session covers when lethal-means counseling is indicated\, how to introduce the topic\, and how to plan safe storage options that fit a person’s values and daily reality. \nParticipants practice language for collaborative problem-solving and learn how to coordinate with families and care teams. The goal is simple\, safer environments for Veterans and all community members while risk is elevated\, with clear next steps for follow-up and return to usual storage when the crisis has passed. Proposed firearm safety solutions respect individuals’ dignity and their second amendment rights. \nOutcomes\nParticipants gain confidence initiating lethal-means conversations\, identify feasible storage options\, and coordinate follow-up with families and care teams to sustain safety. \nLearning Objectives \n\nIdentify when lethal-means counseling is indicated.\nExplain storage options for firearms and medications during elevated risk.\nDemonstrate respectful language that aligns with personal values and legal considerations.\nApply a short safety plan that includes storage\, monitoring\, and follow-up.\nCollaborate with families and providers to review and adjust the plan over time.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2026-01-13-1200p/counseling-on-access-to-lethal-means-training-calm-20260113-1200/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/image-calm.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260121T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260121T130000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20251217T221656Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251217T221656Z
UID:4227-1768996800-1769000400@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Suicide Prevention: Links to Substance Use Disorder Care (SUD)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration1 hour \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: ACPE CPE\, AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, ACPE and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity1 hour CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nThis session connects substance use and suicide risk in clear\, actionable ways. Participants will review key facts and treatment gaps\, including Veteran-specific considerations\, and focus on practical next steps. Learn to spot early warning signs\, reduce stigma in conversation and care\, and plan for safety that fits a person’s readiness and resources. The training covers warm referral to treatment\, coordination with recovery supports\, and when to consider lethal-means steps within a broader safety plan. \nOutcomes\nParticipants identify early risk\, use stigma-reducing language\, plan for safety\, and complete warm referrals that connect people to timely SUD and mental health care. \nLearning Objectives \n\nDescribe early warning signs\, risk factors\, and protective factors across settings.\nRecall connections between SUD prevalence\, treatment gaps\, and suicide risk.\nDemonstrate brief\, stigma-reducing conversations that invite help-seeking.\nApply a safety plan that may include lethal-means steps where indicated.\nCoordinate warm referrals and follow-up with treatment and recovery supports.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2026-01-21-1200p/suicide-prevention-links-to-substance-use-disorder-care-sud-20260121-1200/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/image-sud.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260128T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260128T120000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20251217T221540Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251218T170914Z
UID:4228-1769598000-1769601600@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Integrating Trauma Informed Care into Suicide Response (ITIC)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration1 hour \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity1 hour CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nThis training helps attendees understand how trauma can shape suicide risk\, coping\, and engagement before\, during\, and after a crisis. Using SAMHSA’s trauma-informed principles\, concepts are translated into practical steps that create safety\, trust\, collaboration\, empowerment\, and cultural humility. Participants learn how to reduce re-traumatization\, strengthen connection\, and support recovery for Veterans and civilians across settings. The session links principles to concrete actions\, including language choices\, environmental considerations\, and small process changes that improve care and community support. \nOutcomes\nParticipants connect trauma-informed principles to suicide prevention\, reduce re-traumatization in conversations and settings\, and improve engagement and follow-through after attempts or losses. \nLearning Objectives \n\nExplain how trauma exposure and responses influence suicide risk and help-seeking.\nApply SAMHSA trauma-informed principles to real scenarios.\nDemonstrate language and environmental adjustments that increase psychological safety.\nIntegrate peer\, family\, and cultural strengths into safety and recovery plans.\nEvaluate interactions for potential triggers and adapt approach accordingly.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2026-01-28-1100a/integrating-trauma-informed-care-into-suicide-response-itic-20260128-1100/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/image-itic.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260212T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260212T150000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20251217T221451Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251217T221451Z
UID:4232-1770901200-1770908400@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Question\, Persuade\, Refer (QPR)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration2 hours \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity2 hours CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nNote: Consider registering for the CALM training offered immediately after this session\, as it complements QPR. \nQPR teaches practical skills that help you become an effective “gatekeeper” who notices warning signs\, starts a caring conversation\, and connects someone to help. You will learn the three core actions: \n\nQuestion: Initiate a compassionate conversation to explore the individual’s thoughts and feelings about suicide.\nPersuade: Encourage the person to seek and accept professional help.\nRefer: Connect the individual with the proper resources and support services.\n\nConcepts are reinforced with clear examples that fit daily life at home\, in clinics\, and in community settings. The training aligns with best practices\, including asking directly about suicide\, using non-stigmatizing language\, and linking to 988 and local resources. Because suicide affects many groups\, including Veterans and their families\, QPR builds confidence to act early\, reduce risk\, and support safety while professional care is arranged. \nOutcomes\nParticipants grow comfortable asking directly about suicide\, increase accuracy recognizing clues and warning signs\, and improve the speed and quality of referrals to crisis and community care\, including 988 and local providers. \nLearning Objectives \n\nRecognize common verbal\, behavioral\, and situational warning signs of suicide\nDifferentiate helpful from unhelpful language when asking about suicide.\nDemonstrate the QPR steps to encourage help-seeking and hope.\nApply a brief referral plan that links to 988 and local resources.\nCollaborate with family\, peers\, and providers to support short-term safety.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2026-02-12-100p/question-persuade-refer-qpr-20260212-1300/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/image-qpr.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260212T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260212T160000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20251217T221403Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251217T221403Z
UID:4229-1770908400-1770912000@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Counseling on Access to Lethal Means Training (CALM)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration1 hour \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity1 hour CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nNote: Consider registering for the QPR training offered immediately before this session\, as it complements CALM. \nCALM teaches respectful\, practical ways to reduce access to lethal means\, especially firearms and medications\, during periods of suicide risk. The session covers when lethal-means counseling is indicated\, how to introduce the topic\, and how to plan safe storage options that fit a person’s values and daily reality. \nParticipants practice language for collaborative problem-solving and learn how to coordinate with families and care teams. The goal is simple\, safer environments for Veterans and all community members while risk is elevated\, with clear next steps for follow-up and return to usual storage when the crisis has passed. Proposed firearm safety solutions respect individuals’ dignity and their second amendment rights. \nOutcomes\nParticipants gain confidence initiating lethal-means conversations\, identify feasible storage options\, and coordinate follow-up with families and care teams to sustain safety. \nLearning Objectives \n\nIdentify when lethal-means counseling is indicated.\nExplain storage options for firearms and medications during elevated risk.\nDemonstrate respectful language that aligns with personal values and legal considerations.\nApply a short safety plan that includes storage\, monitoring\, and follow-up.\nCollaborate with families and providers to review and adjust the plan over time.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2026-02-12-300p/counseling-on-access-to-lethal-means-training-calm-20260212-1500/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/image-calm.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260219T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260219T140000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20251217T221256Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251217T221256Z
UID:4230-1771506000-1771509600@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Suicide Prevention: Links to Substance Use Disorder Care (SUD)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration1 hour \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: ACPE CPE\, AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, ACPE and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity1 hour CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nThis session connects substance use and suicide risk in clear\, actionable ways. Participants will review key facts\, treatment gaps\, including Veteran-specific considerations\, then focus on what to do next. Learn to spot early warning signs\, reduce stigma in conversation and care\, and plan for safety that fits a person’s readiness and resources. We cover warm referral to treatment\, coordination with recovery supports\, and when to consider lethal-means steps within a broader safety plan. \nOutcomes\nParticipants identify early risk\, use stigma-reducing language\, plan for safety\, and complete warm referrals that connect people to timely SUD and mental health care. \nLearning Objectives \n\nDescribe early warning signs\, risk factors\, and protective factors across settings.\nRecall connections between SUD prevalence\, treatment gaps\, and links to suicide risk.\nDemonstrate brief\, stigma-reducing conversations that invite help-seeking.\nApply a safety plan that may include lethal-means steps where indicated.\nCoordinate warm referrals and follow-up with treatment and recovery supports.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2026-02-19-100p/suicide-prevention-links-to-substance-use-disorder-care-sud-20260219-1300/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/image-sud.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260224T143000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260224T153000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20251217T221208Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20251217T221208Z
UID:4231-1771943400-1771947000@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Integrating Trauma Informed Care into Suicide Response (ITIC)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration1 hour \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity1 hour CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nThis training helps attendees understand how trauma can shape suicide risk\, coping\, and engagement before\, during\, and after a crisis. Using SAMHSA’s trauma-informed principles\, we translate concepts into practical steps that create safety\, trust\, collaboration\, empowerment\, and cultural humility. You will learn ways to reduce re-traumatization\, strengthen connection\, and support recovery for Veterans and civilians across settings. The session links principles to actions you can take today\, including language\, environment tips\, and small process changes that improve care and community support. Participants leave with strategies that fit both professional practice and everyday life. \nOutcomes\nParticipants connect trauma-informed principles to suicide prevention\, reduce re-traumatization in conversations and settings\, and improve engagement and follow-through after attempts or losses. \nLearning Objectives \n\nExplain how trauma exposure and responses can influence suicide risk and help-seeking.\nApply SAMHSA trauma-informed principles to real scenarios.\nDemonstrate language and environmental adjustments that increase psychological safety.\nIntegrate peer\, family\, and cultural strengths into safety and recovery plans.\nEvaluate interactions for potential triggers and adapt approach accordingly.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2026-02-24-230p/integrating-trauma-informed-care-into-suicide-response-itic-20260224-1430/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/12/image-itic.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260310T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260310T130000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20260219T225626Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260220T013501Z
UID:4275-1773140400-1773147600@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Question\, Persuade\, Refer (QPR)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration2 hours \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity2 hours CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nNote: Consider registering for the CALM training offered immediately after this session\, as it complements QPR. \nQPR teaches practical skills that help you become an effective “gatekeeper” who notices warning signs\, starts a caring conversation\, and connects someone to help. You will learn the three core actions: \n\nQuestion: Initiate a compassionate conversation to explore the individual’s thoughts and feelings about suicide.\nPersuade: Encourage the person to seek and accept professional help.\nRefer: Connect the individual with the proper resources and support services.\n\nConcepts are reinforced with clear examples that fit daily life at home\, in clinics\, and in community settings. The training aligns with best practices\, including asking directly about suicide\, using non-stigmatizing language\, and linking to 988 and local resources. Because suicide affects many groups\, including Veterans and their families\, QPR builds confidence to act early\, reduce risk\, and support safety while professional care is arranged. \nOutcomes\nParticipants grow comfortable asking directly about suicide\, increase accuracy recognizing clues and warning signs\, and improve the speed and quality of referrals to crisis and community care\, including 988 and local providers. \nLearning Objectives \n\nRecognize common verbal\, behavioral\, and situational warning signs of suicide\nDifferentiate helpful from unhelpful language when asking about suicide.\nDemonstrate the QPR steps to encourage help-seeking and hope.\nApply a brief referral plan that links to 988 and local resources.\nCollaborate with family\, peers\, and providers to support short-term safety.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2026-03-10-1100a/question-persuade-refer-qpr-20260310-1100/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/image-Suicide-Prevention-QPR.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260310T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260310T140000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20260219T225948Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260220T013552Z
UID:4276-1773147600-1773151200@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Counseling on Access to Lethal Means Training (CALM)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration1 hour \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity1 hour CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nNote: Consider registering for the QPR training offered immediately before this session\, as it complements CALM. \nCALM teaches respectful\, practical ways to reduce access to lethal means\, especially firearms and medications\, during periods of suicide risk. The session covers when lethal-means counseling is indicated\, how to introduce the topic\, and how to plan safe storage options that fit a person’s values and daily reality. \nParticipants practice language for collaborative problem-solving and learn how to coordinate with families and care teams. The goal is simple\, safer environments for Veterans and all community members while risk is elevated\, with clear next steps for follow-up and return to usual storage when the crisis has passed. Proposed firearm safety solutions respect individuals’ dignity and their second amendment rights. \n \nOutcomesParticipants gain confidence initiating lethal-means conversations\, identify feasible storage options\, and coordinate follow-up with families and care teams to sustain safety. \nLearning Objectives \n\nIdentify when lethal-means counseling is indicated.\nExplain storage options for firearms and medications during elevated risk.\nDemonstrate respectful language that aligns with personal values and legal considerations.\nApply a short safety plan that includes storage\, monitoring\, and follow-up.\nCollaborate with families and providers to review and adjust the plan over time.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2026-03-10-100p/counseling-on-access-to-lethal-means-training-calm-20260310-1300/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/image-Suicide-Prevention-CALM.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260326T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260326T150000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20260219T211708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260219T230537Z
UID:4277-1774533600-1774537200@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Suicide Prevention: Links to Substance Use Disorder Care (SUD)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration1 hour \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: ACPE CPE\, AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, ACPE and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity1 hour CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nThis session connects substance use and suicide risk in clear\, actionable ways. Participants will review key facts\, treatment gaps\, including some Veteran-specific considerations\, then focus on “what to do next.” Learn to spot early warning signs\, reduce stigma in conversation and care\, and plan for safety that fits a person’s readiness and resources. We cover warm referral to treatment\, coordination with recovery supports\, and when to consider lethal-means steps within a broader safety plan. Participants leave with practical tools to act early\, improve continuity of care\, and support recovery in community and clinical settings. \nOutcomesParticipants identify early risk\, use stigma-reducing language\, plan for safety\, and complete warm referrals that connect people to timely SUD and mental health care. \nLearning Objectives \n\nDescribe early warning signs\, risk factors\, and protective factors across settings.\nRecall connections between SUD prevalence\, treatment gaps\, and links to suicide risk.\nDemonstrate brief\, stigma-reducing conversations that invite help-seeking.\nApply a safety plan that may include lethal-means steps where indicated.\nCoordinate warm referrals and follow-up with treatment and recovery supports.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2026-03-26-200p/suicide-prevention-links-to-substance-use-disorder-care-sud-20260326-1400/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/image-Suicide-Prevention-SUD.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260330T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260330T130000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20260219T211220Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260219T230718Z
UID:4278-1774872000-1774875600@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Integrating Trauma Informed Care into Suicide Response (ITIC)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration1 hour \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity1 hour CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nThis training helps attendees understand how trauma can shape suicide risk\, coping\, and engagement before\, during\, and after a crisis. Using SAMHSA’s trauma-informed principles\, we translate concepts into practical steps that create safety\, trust\, collaboration\, empowerment\, and cultural humility. You will learn ways to reduce re-traumatization\, strengthen connection\, and support recovery for Veterans and civilians across settings. The session links principles to actions you can take today\, including language\, environment tips\, and small process changes that improve care and community support. Participants leave with strategies that fit both professional practice and everyday life. \nOutcomes\nParticipants connect trauma-informed principles to suicide prevention\, reduce re-traumatization in conversations and settings\, and improve engagement and follow-through after attempts or losses. \nLearning Objectives \n\nExplain how trauma exposure and responses can influence suicide risk and help-seeking.\nApply SAMHSA trauma-informed principles to real scenarios.\nDemonstrate language and environmental adjustments that increase psychological safety.\nIntegrate peer\, family\, and cultural strengths into safety and recovery plans.\nEvaluate interactions for potential triggers and adapt approach accordingly.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2026-03-30-1200p/integrating-trauma-informed-care-into-suicide-response-itic-20260330-1200/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/image-Suicide-Prevention-ITIC.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260402T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260402T140000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20260219T225715Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260220T013647Z
UID:4279-1775131200-1775138400@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Question\, Persuade\, Refer (QPR)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration2 hours \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity2 hours CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nNote: Consider registering for the CALM training offered immediately after this session\, as it complements QPR. \nQPR teaches practical skills that help you become an effective “gatekeeper” who notices warning signs\, starts a caring conversation\, and connects someone to help. You will learn the three core actions:  \n\nQuestion: Initiate a compassionate conversation to explore the individual’s thoughts and feelings about suicide.\nPersuade: Encourage the person to seek and accept professional help.\nRefer: Connect the individual with the proper resources and support services.\n\nConcepts are reinforced with clear examples that fit daily life at home\, in clinics\, and in community settings. The training aligns with best practices\, including asking directly about suicide\, using non-stigmatizing language\, and linking to 988 and local resources. Because suicide affects many groups\, including Veterans and their families\, QPR builds confidence to act early\, reduce risk\, and support safety while professional care is arranged. \nOutcomesParticipants grow comfortable asking directly about suicide\, increase accuracy recognizing clues and warning signs\, and improve the speed and quality of referrals to crisis and community care\, including 988 and local providers. \nLearning Objectives \n\nRecognize common verbal\, behavioral\, and situational warning signs of suicide\nDifferentiate helpful from unhelpful language when asking about suicide.\nDemonstrate the QPR steps to encourage help-seeking and hope.\nApply a brief referral plan that links to 988 and local resources.\nCollaborate with family\, peers\, and providers to support short-term safety.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2026-04-02-1200p/question-persuade-refer-qpr-20260402-1200/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/image-Suicide-Prevention-QPR.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260402T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260402T150000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20260219T230015Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260220T013726Z
UID:4280-1775138400-1775142000@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Counseling on Access to Lethal Means Training (CALM)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration1 hour \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity1 hour CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nNote: Consider registering for the QPR training offered immediately before this session\, as it complements CALM. \nCALM teaches respectful\, practical ways to reduce access to lethal means\, especially firearms and medications\, during periods of suicide risk. The session covers when lethal-means counseling is indicated\, how to introduce the topic\, and how to plan safe storage options that fit a person’s values and daily reality. \nParticipants practice language for collaborative problem-solving and learn how to coordinate with families and care teams. The goal is simple\, safer environments for Veterans and all community members while risk is elevated\, with clear next steps for follow-up and return to usual storage when the crisis has passed. Proposed firearm safety solutions respect individuals’ dignity and their second amendment rights. \n \nOutcomesParticipants gain confidence initiating lethal-means conversations\, identify feasible storage options\, and coordinate follow-up with families and care teams to sustain safety. \nLearning Objectives \n\nIdentify when lethal-means counseling is indicated.\nExplain storage options for firearms and medications during elevated risk.\nDemonstrate respectful language that aligns with personal values and legal considerations.\nApply a short safety plan that includes storage\, monitoring\, and follow-up.\nCollaborate with families and providers to review and adjust the plan over time.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2026-04-02-200p/counseling-on-access-to-lethal-means-training-calm-20260402-1400/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/image-Suicide-Prevention-CALM.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260415T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260415T140000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20260219T211848Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260219T230559Z
UID:4305-1776258000-1776261600@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Suicide Prevention: Links to Substance Use Disorder Care (SUD)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration1 hour \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: ACPE CPE\, AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, ACPE and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity1 hour CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nThis session connects substance use and suicide risk in clear\, actionable ways. Participants will review key facts\, treatment gaps\, including some Veteran-specific considerations\, then focus on “what to do next.” Learn to spot early warning signs\, reduce stigma in conversation and care\, and plan for safety that fits a person’s readiness and resources. We cover warm referral to treatment\, coordination with recovery supports\, and when to consider lethal-means steps within a broader safety plan. Participants leave with practical tools to act early\, improve continuity of care\, and support recovery in community and clinical settings. \nOutcomes\nParticipants identify early risk\, use stigma-reducing language\, plan for safety\, and complete warm referrals that connect people to timely SUD and mental health care. \nLearning Objectives \n\nDescribe early warning signs\, risk factors\, and protective factors across settings.\nRecall connections between SUD prevalence\, treatment gaps\, and links to suicide risk.\nDemonstrate brief\, stigma-reducing conversations that invite help-seeking.\nApply a safety plan that may include lethal-means steps where indicated.\nCoordinate warm referrals and follow-up with treatment and recovery supports.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2026-04-15-100p/suicide-prevention-links-to-substance-use-disorder-care-sud-10/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/image-Suicide-Prevention-SUD.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260421T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260421T130000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20260219T211313Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260219T230740Z
UID:4299-1776772800-1776776400@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Integrating Trauma Informed Care into Suicide Response (ITIC)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration1 hour \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity1 hour CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nThis training helps attendees understand how trauma can shape suicide risk\, coping\, and engagement before\, during\, and after a crisis. Using SAMHSA’s trauma-informed principles\, we translate concepts into practical steps that create safety\, trust\, collaboration\, empowerment\, and cultural humility. You will learn ways to reduce re-traumatization\, strengthen connection\, and support recovery for Veterans and civilians across settings. The session links principles to actions you can take today\, including language\, environment tips\, and small process changes that improve care and community support. Participants leave with strategies that fit both professional practice and everyday life. \nOutcomes\nParticipants connect trauma-informed principles to suicide prevention\, reduce re-traumatization in conversations and settings\, and improve engagement and follow-through after attempts or losses. \nLearning Objectives \n\nExplain how trauma exposure and responses can influence suicide risk and help-seeking.\nApply SAMHSA trauma-informed principles to real scenarios.\nDemonstrate language and environmental adjustments that increase psychological safety.\nIntegrate peer\, family\, and cultural strengths into safety and recovery plans.\nEvaluate interactions for potential triggers and adapt approach accordingly.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2026-04-21-1200p/integrating-trauma-informed-care-into-suicide-response-itic-21/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/image-Suicide-Prevention-ITIC.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260507T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260507T150000
DTSTAMP:20260408T171507
CREATED:20260219T225744Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260220T013848Z
UID:4293-1778158800-1778166000@www.theresilientveteran.org
SUMMARY:Question\, Persuade\, Refer (QPR)
DESCRIPTION:Training Details \nDuration2 hours \nCostFree \nApprovalsThis activity is approved for the following credit: AMA PRA Category 1 Credit™\, ANCC\, ASWB\, and AAPA Category 1 CME. \nQuantity2 hours CE \nProviderPitt PERU and UPMC Western Behavioral Health at Safe Harbor \nAudience \nOpen to all community members\, Veterans and their families\, and practitioners across healthcare\, behavioral health\, social services\, education\, first response\, and peer support. \nDescription \nNote: Consider registering for the CALM training offered immediately after this session\, as it complements QPR. \nQPR teaches practical skills that help you become an effective “gatekeeper” who notices warning signs\, starts a caring conversation\, and connects someone to help. You will learn the three core actions:  \n\nQuestion: Initiate a compassionate conversation to explore the individual’s thoughts and feelings about suicide.\nPersuade: Encourage the person to seek and accept professional help.\nRefer: Connect the individual with the proper resources and support services.\n\nConcepts are reinforced with clear examples that fit daily life at home\, in clinics\, and in community settings. The training aligns with best practices\, including asking directly about suicide\, using non-stigmatizing language\, and linking to 988 and local resources. Because suicide affects many groups\, including Veterans and their families\, QPR builds confidence to act early\, reduce risk\, and support safety while professional care is arranged. \nOutcomesParticipants grow comfortable asking directly about suicide\, increase accuracy recognizing clues and warning signs\, and improve the speed and quality of referrals to crisis and community care\, including 988 and local providers. \nLearning Objectives \n\nRecognize common verbal\, behavioral\, and situational warning signs of suicide\nDifferentiate helpful from unhelpful language when asking about suicide.\nDemonstrate the QPR steps to encourage help-seeking and hope.\nApply a brief referral plan that links to 988 and local resources.\nCollaborate with family\, peers\, and providers to support short-term safety.\n\nRegister Now \nQuestions? Contact Chris at 412-383-3926 or chirdon@pitt.edu \nFunded by the CDC’s Division of Injury Prevention: https://www.cdc.gov
URL:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/event/2026-05-07-100p/question-persuade-refer-qpr-20260507-1300/
CATEGORIES:Professional Development,Virtual
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://www.theresilientveteran.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/02/image-Suicide-Prevention-QPR.png
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR