LivingWorks Awards and Recognition
Cause of Death? (1982) - 16 minute film/video
- Award of Merit, University of
Calgary ComMedia entry in the Association for Media and Technology in Education
in Canada Media Festival, Winnipeg, 1982.
It Begins With You (1987) - 29 minute video
- Gold Medal Award, University of Calgary, ComMedia entry
in the International Film and TV Festival of New York, 1987
- Golden Apple
Award, University of Calgary, ComMedia entry in the National Educational
Film and Video Festival, Oakland, CA, 1988
- Best Motivational Film, Best
Actress, Best Actor Awards,
University of Calgary, ComMedia entry in the Alberta Motion Picture Industry
Awards, 1988
- Red Ribbon Award, University of Calgary, ComMedia video entry
in the American Film Festival, 1988
- Panasonic Award, Best Post-Secondary
Film, University of Calgary, ComMedia entry in the Association for Media
and Technology in Education
in Canada Media Festival, Halifax, 1988
LivingWorks Education
- President's Export Achievement Award, The University
of Calgary, for implementation of the Alberta developed suicide prevention
training
program in California, 1989
- Export Achievement Award, Alberta Economic Development
and Trade Department, for implementation of the Alberta developed suicide
prevention training
program in California, 1988
- LivingWorks Education Inc. cited twice as
an exemplary community gatekeeper training program in Youth Suicide Prevention
Programs: A Resource
Guide, Center for Diseases Control Atlanta, 1992
- International Business and Export
Acheivement Award, Calgary Economic Development Authority and the Mayor of
Calgary, for the implementation
of suicide prevention training in Australia, California, State of Washington
and
United
States Army, 1997
- LivingWorks success story. The President’s
Report to the Community 1998/99 edition. University of Calgary, 1999
- Knowledge Broker Award for leadership, research and analytical skill, and
dedication to public engagement in policy development.
National Policy Research Conference in Ottawa Canada, 2002
Principals
- Bryan Tanney, Research Award, Canadian Association of Suicide Prevention,
1995
- Roger Tierney, First Roger J. Tierney Service Award, American
Association of Suicidology, 1998
- Richard Ramsay, Dr. John H. Read Award for
outstanding achievement in the area of injury control, Alberta Centre for
Injury Control
and Research, 1999
Recognition
- Certificate of Commendation, Governor, State of California, for
implementation of California’s innovative youth suicide intervention
training program, 1989
- LivingWorks Education Inc. cited
twice as an exemplary community gatekeeper training program in Youth Suicide
Prevention Programs:
A Resource Guide, Center for Diseases Control Atlanta, 1992
- Dr. Robert Litman
(Theme Address). “Suicide: A Look Back and Ahead,” American
Association of Suicidology (AAS), Phoenix, 1995. In his
address Dr. Litman referred to a study comissioned by the State of California
in mid 1980’s on youth
suicide which called for: “a grass roots program
of education in basic helping tasks for potential helpers
such as probation
officers, school
counsellors,
nurses, police officers and clinical professionals at
every level.”
“
The recommendation was implemented by Bryan Tanney [and his colleagues Ramsay,
Tierney and Lang, now LivingWorks Education] and has
been going on ever since. There have been meetings and training sessions
with some evidence that lectures
have little effect but workshops can have some effect.
[California is the] only state that has had a progressive reduction in suicide
rates over the years. I
would like to think there is among the California helpers
a knowledge of intervention and attitude that may be helpful in small ways,
but small ways count. In fact
I do think that program we gave for youth suicide prevention
is a good one and should be extended widely.” (Litman, 1995)
- Dr. Ron
Dyck, Provincial Suicidologist, (Keynote Address). “Opening
our Borders” Canadian Association of Suicide Prevention
(CASP), Banff, Alberta, October 1995.
“ Let me give you a third success story... it is training. Something that
the ‘boys of Alberta’ [Ramsay, Tanney, Tierney, Lang, now LivingWorks
Education] have developed... What are the results? Well, there have been a number
of evaluations of this particular workshop and what we find... what the data shows
is an increased knowledge about suicide, a demonstrated improvement in intervention
skills and abilities. There is an application of this knowledge and these skills
in actual situations. There is perceived greater self-confidence and capability
on the part of those who have been trained in dealing with persons at risk. That
is really critical... increased confidence and increased sense of capability of
being able to deal with those who are suicidal. Since 1983 more than 1,200 trainers
have been trained and workshops have been delivered to about 65,000 [over 200,000
in 2000] people world wide. That’s a lot of people. It’s an incredible
workshop.
Let
me tell you about some spinoffs. Dwayne Heinsen (a senior
trainer and member of the RCMP) and I had dinner
last night.
Dwayne was
talking about
some work
he was doing in Quebec with the Aboriginal RCMP and having
the Mohawk Nation sitting together with the Quebec Police.
You know
the tensions,
and to
have them together, sitting together in a workshop like
this can have spinoffs. Yeah there
is a lot of tension, but by the end of that training
people were working together... the Mohawk and the Quebec
Police
were in
fact coming together
and saying how
we can affect suicide [prevention] in our communities.
A
success story because the kinds of things we do have implications far broader
than what we sometimes think
about.” (Dyck,
1995)
- SAMHSA (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration) Knowledge, Development and Application
Grants. LivingWorks programs
were selected by project proposers in two of four SAMSHA funded youth suicide
prevention
evaluation projects, one in Colorado and one in Tennessee, 2001.