Suicide Prevention in Aotearoa (Level 4)

Social Services

A course by

Careerforce

A micro-credential designed to develop knowledge and understanding of suicide prevention in an Aotearoa New Zealand context, ideal for support workers in health, wellbeing, and social service sectors.

NZ$260

inc GST

Enquire about international pricing


This course starts anytime

NZQA Level 4 Certification (11 Credits)

Study Level

Entry

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10

Online study

Flexible online learning from anywhere

It will take a total of 9 weeks

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Explain suicide and suicidal ideation in a New Zealand context

Graduates will be able to explain the phenomena of suicide and suicidal ideation within the cultural and societal context of Aotearoa.

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Recognise causes and prevalence of suicide

Learners can identify various causes and contributing factors to suicide, and understand its prevalence in the community.

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Identify and explain roles of supports

Graduates can identify and explain the roles of natural, local, and national support systems in suicide prevention.

What You're Signing Up For

This micro-credential recognises the skills and knowledge required to develop effective suicide prevention practice within the unique cultural and social context of Aotearoa New Zealand. Graduates will gain an understanding of suicide and suicidal ideation, contributing factors, support systems, prevention strategies, responding to suicidal behaviour, and ways to support others—including themselves—impacted by suicide. It is suitable for support workers in a wide range of settings including mental health, addiction, youth work, disability, aged care, community, and residential care.

Course Content

  • Understanding suicide and suicidal ideation in Aotearoa New Zealand
  • Causes and prevalence of suicide
  • Roles of natural, local, and national supports
  • Procedures in local suicide prevention strategies
  • Types of response and approaches for persons experiencing suicidal ideation
  • Postvention roles and bereavement support
  • Legal obligations and role boundaries for support workers
  • Impacts of suicide on self and colleagues; approaches to self-care

What you need to know first

Learners must be working in a relevant sector.

Reasonable computer literacy is required, as assessments are online.

Must be currently employed and supported by employer for enrolment.

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What sort of industry will this job lead to

  • Health

  • Disability Support

  • Aged Care

  • Mental Health and Addiction Support

  • Social Services

  • Youth Work

  • Community Healthcare

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Future employment opportunities might be

  • Support Worker in mental health, addiction, youth work, disability, aged care, community, or residential care