Voices For Suicide Prevention
A phone app that helps cut suicide attempts by more than half sounds like science fiction until you hear the data and the design choices behind it. We sit down with Dr. Seth Feuerstein (Yale School of Medicine) to talk about OTX202, a clinician-supported suicide prevention app developed in collaboration with Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center. It's built to deliver suicide-specific therapy skills after hospitalization and other high-risk periods. We walk through why proven suicide interventions often fail to reach people who need them most. We also dig into stigma and the “why would they do that?” trap, using a striking medical analogy: suicidal crisis as an arrhythmia-like state of the brain. Dangerous? Yes. Treatable? Yes. Finally, we get practical about implementation and where artificial intelligence may fit next, with ethics and safety front and center. If you care about mental health, digital therapeutics, and evidence-based suicide prevention, subscribe, share this episode with someone who works in care, and leave a review so more people can find these conversations.
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