Collective Messaging Framework
Think of the collective messaging framework as a guide for broadening better understanding of the connection between ACEs, overdose and suicide. It is designed to communicate the need to break down silos to address these three health issues more effectively. As such, the collective messaging framework:
- Provides messages about ACEs, overdose and suicide that strengthen the work of experts in each of these individual issues.
- Advances an overarching narrative that ACEs, overdose and suicide are urgent, related and preventable public health challenges and are rooted in public health inequities.
- Empowers subject matter experts to inform stakeholder decisions toward effective, prevention-focused public health policies, approaches and funding.
Core Message
Adverse childhood experiences, overdose and suicide are urgent and related public health challenges. While these challenges have consequences for all of us, some communities are more affected than others due to systemic barriers, like a lack of resources or opportunities.
These challenges are preventable if we adopt a coordinated and equitable approach that focuses on addressing today’s crises while preventing tomorrow’s.
Urgent
Exposure to ACEs, overdose and suicide are urgent public health challenges confronting every community in the country. These challenges contribute to shortened life span, lower quality of life, rising health care costs, lost economic productivity and strain on our social service system that affect all of us. This urgency is heightened by trauma passed down from one generation to another and by lack of public investment in some communities. This makes existing health challenges worse and makes it harder to seek preventive or lifesaving resources.
Related
These challenges are related because exposure to ACEs is associated with increased risk of overdose and suicide later in life. And for children, because losing a loved one to suicide or overdose is an ACE, future overdose or suicide risk grows. As such, ACEs, overdose and suicide are each associated with the other, and the impact can last across generations. People who are affected by substance use and suicide early in life are also disproportionately affected by systems inequities, like structural racism. This leads to health inequities, or the uneven distribution of social and economic resources that impact an individual’s health.
Preventable
Fortunately, these three crises are preventable if we take a comprehensive public health approach that addresses the complex and often related challenges that impact health disparities. By building on community strengths—and focusing not just on treatment but also on awareness building and prevention strategies that fit the community—we can meet the immediate needs of those already affected today while preventing future risk and adverse health outcomes tomorrow.
Approach
We need a coordinated approach to ensure equity in policies, programs and services that build on the strengths of individuals, families and communities while reducing the disparities that increase risk for some more than others. This can happen when we:
- Increase understanding of the causes and impact, and better coordinate across treatment and prevention fields.
- Engage a broad movement of champions and change agents in communities.
- Invest in research and evaluation to better understand what works, why and for whom.
- Implement successful treatment and prevention strategies that are adapted for specific cultural contexts.