Changing the Narrative: How Data and Technology Can Save Lives
In recognition of World Suicide Prevention Day (September 10), Oracle Health brings together leading voices in clinical care, behavioral health, and technology to explore how data-driven innovation can help prevent suicide and improve mental health outcomes. Join Oracle Health’s Danny Gladden, LCSW, MBA, Director, Behavioral Health and Social Care and Dr. Keita Franklin, a nationally recognized expert in suicide prevention, as they discuss how ethical, person-centered use of data can detect risk earlier, connect people to care faster, and support clinicians on the frontlines. From integrated screening tools like the PHQ-9 and C-SSRS to risk alerts, we’ll examine how technology, with quality care—when paired with compassion—can close critical gaps in behavioral health. This conversation is a call to action for health systems, providers, and technology partners to change the narrative on suicide, together. If you or someone you know is in crisis, please reach out to your local helpline or call/text 988 in the U.S. and Canada. ----------------------------------------------------------- Episode Transcript: Intro 00:00 - 00:29 Welcome to Perspectives on Health and Tech podcast. Brought to you by Oracle Health. In this series, we have conversations on creating a seamless and connected health care world where everyone thrives. Let's get started. Danny Gladden 00:30 - 02:26 Welcome to Perspectives on Health and Tech. Thank you for joining us. I'm Danny Gladden, general manager of behavioral health and social care at Oracle Health. I'm also a licensed clinical social worker, and I've spent my career working in suicide prevention from crisis lines to community mental health to supporting national efforts with the Department of Defense and the VA. For me, the work is personal and lifelong. At Oracle Health, we believe technology has a role to play in ending suicide with one of the largest global electronic health record footprints and long standing partnerships with the VA and the DoD. We see the impact that suicide has across every community we serve. This isn't an issue that only affects certain families or certain health system. It impacts all of us. That's why we're speaking out as a technology company. Because suicide prevention is not only about crisis intervention, it's about building systems that connect people to help earlier equip clinicians with the right tools and make sure that no one falls to the cracks. Our responsibility is to use data design and technology in ways that honor the human side of care, while supporting providers who are on the frontlines every day. And today, I'm honored to be joined by Doctor Keita Franklin, chief of behavioral health at Leidos, one of the nation's foremost experts in suicide prevention, who's led this work at the highest levels of government and continues to advance the field through research, policy and practice. And so, Keita, it's so good to be with you today. I'm so glad you've joined us. You and I have had a chance to do some pretty incredible work together. You have, spent much of your career leading national suicide prevention efforts with the VA, the DoD, the Columbia Lighthouse project. How has that experience shaped your perspective on the urgency of this issue? Keita Franklin 02:26 - 03:44 Thank you so much for having me, Danny. And I always love our work together and our connection as social workers in the field over the years, so I truly appreciate the chance to talk to you this morning. You know, one of the first things that comes to mind for me is just a basic, sort of lesson is just the complexities around suicide. Now, I don't think people know, you know, when somebody dies by suicide, there is a lot of variables and factors at play. And it's never it's never one reason. But like you'll hear about people that struggle with a host of reasons, some of which are medically oriented and pain management oriented and complexities around TBI, and some of them are mental health related, and some of them are things that you and I always talk about related to social determinants of health. So just the complexities, that's probably one of my biggest sort of things to think about. And sure, in terms of shaping my perspective. And then I appreciate the upstream. I'm definitely an upstream sort of thinker in terms of like, how do we get, you know, the military used to call this left of boom, but like, how do we get, away from just intervening at the time at the single point in time of crisis? I don't know if you saw the CDC and the National Action Alliance just pushed out this new upstream toolkit or guide this week. I have that on my list of things to look at. Danny Gladden 03:45- 04:15 Yeah, it's really great, isn't it, to have, more folks in across health care and beyond talking about suicide, suicide prevention now. So Oracle, we're a technology company. We believe we have a part to play in the bigger ecosystem of suicide prevention. If you think about a company like Oracle and Oracle Health, you know, why is it important for a company like ours to be part of this conversation? Keita Franklin 04:15 - 05:34 Well, for a couple different reasons. And I'm in the same boat. You know, Leidos is also a technology company, and we're so thrilled for our partnership with you all around some of these issues. But really, a couple of things that we know about suicide is at the center of a public health approach is just the importance of data. Like data drives the entire public health approach. And whether you're like a brand new suicide prevention coordinator on the ground in a local county, or whether you're tackling suicide at the National level, you have to have your hands on a good set of data. And I know that you are all about data, as is Oracle at large. But then also what do we do with the data and how do we bring more technology tools to the fight when it comes to preventing suicide. By using good data, not only in mental health care systems as flags and as you know, part of predictive analytics. But also, I think we're seeing on the horizon more AI tools and advanced ways to bring self-help tools with clinician oversight. Maybe we'll talk about that more in the podcast. But definitely there is a role for technology. And I've always over the years I've put it in the pilot bucket. When you're doing good public health programing, you always have four or 5 or 6 pilots going where you're testing new interventions, trying to advance the needle with new and innovative treatments and the like. And I think technology fits in there. Danny Gladden 05:35 - 07:22 Well, I feel a burden, a healthy burden. If we think about, say, behavioral health technology companies, of course, they're the users of their tech, kind of have a responsibility to ensure they account for suicide prevention and screening and whatnot. As an enterprise health care EHR, that service primary care, chronic conditions and an emergency department in med surge and oncology, we have to be really diligent about where we can also infuse best practices for screening across health care delivery system. And I feel sort of, a burden there to make sure we get that right, have the right questions and the right workflows in the right place so that we can, help a doctor who's treating someone with heart disease also be able to talk about the stresses of heart disease and, risk suicide risk that comes from living with a chronic illness. And so that takes me kind of, you know, this year's World Suicide Prevention theme is changing the narrative on suicide. I'm just curious, what does that mean to you? Changing the narrative. It really struck me. I want to hear your perspective and also talk about. I think you've got some really interesting things happening in your career. So, like changing the narrative on suicide. What about small acts of kindness and community engagement and connection? How can that make a difference? Keita Franklin 07:23 - 10:22 No. I so appreciate your question. And also the work that you're doing to embed suicide prevention into like a whole of health care system. So first and foremost, like the, early on in my career, I learned the importance of, like, if we just screen or if we just wait for mental health care alone. You know, we will have missed about many. You know, I learned this at the VA front and center where they, the veterans would go in for headaches and backaches and all of these other types of physical care issues. And when they're doing that, if we don't screen them and we don't engage around suicide prevention, it's a missed opportunity. And it's awful when we see it in the fatality reports after the fact that perhaps they've been to one of our primary care clinics in the days leading up to their death. It's just incredibly tragic for our system to, like, miss any single opportunity to say, disable that. So I'm so pleased that you're doing that. And it is hard work. Right. Because the docs will tell you, I'm busy with this, I'm busy with this, and I have a lot of things to balance. And, you know, they're here for their podiatry appointment. What do you mean? I have to screen, but you just don't know what's going on for people. So that's one thing. And then, I, I think you and I both love the theme, like changing the narrative on suicide. Right? I mean, part of the narrative is that it's upstream. The other small piece that resonates with me about changing the narrative. I'm curious what you think about this as well. Is the focus on lived experience like, I absolutely love for us as a field to never forget the voice of those that have this lived experience, whether you know it's a mom or dad that have lost a loved one, a child to suicide, and you know, of course, in the most tragic of ways, but for us to hear from them and to think about how their experiences can inform our policies and to just keep their voices in our mind at all that we do. And I felt fortunate to do that. In the day when I was leading suicide prevention for the Pentagon, I had the most contact, but also at the VA and even further back with the Marine Corps, just having the ability to stay in touch with troops that have lost one of their own and just hear from them. So I hope that becomes more of the narrative as we quote unquote, change the narrative. And then the last thing I'll tell you guys, I've been in the weeds with the research you can appreciate on a new book called The Humanity Cure. And in the book I've been again researching the most basic of things. Who knew that there's a mountain of research on the importance of small acts of kindness, and on the reciprocal nature of kindness, the reciprocal nature of helping, and how, you know, sometimes when you're when you're in your worst state, reaching out your hand in helping someone actually helps you and just how reciprocal that can be. And it could be life changing. So I'm reading these personal narratives of people that will tell me that they interacted with a stranger a single point in time for less than five minutes, and they, and it changed the full trajectory of their life, like, how is this humanly possible? But it's their story and it's true, and it's in the data and it bears out over time. So I've been digging in on those kind of concepts. Danny Gladden 10:23 - 10:49 Well, I'm excited to, I'm excited to get my get my hands on your new book. And I will tell you, I think we hear from those with lived experience on how they were yearning for human connection, who they just if we've heard stories. So if only someone would reach out. If only someone would have asked. How are you doing? Are you okay? Keita Franklin 10:50 -11:13 I guess I I've been writing about belongingness and compassion and being included. Like, just the power of being included. A people feeling like maybe they don't fit in in their family, but they fit in in this community or that community. Like, they know that if they're not there, someone will call them and say, where were you on Tuesday? You're always there, right? You're so. Yeah, that's so true. Danny Gladden 00:11:14 - 12:24 Yeah. I well, I think your, perspective, what you've written about will add very importantly to the narrative, particularly at a time where we have, in my view, a compassion crisis in this and, around the world. And, we need more human connection. I I'm so lucky I had a mentor who said these words to me, and I've never forgotten them. And I repeat them as often as possible, which is, you can't fuss at someone until they know you care about them. And, you know, and I think about from the health care lens and all the do's and don'ts that I, the health care providers tell folks, do this, don't do this, do this, don't do this. And I just think, in suicide prevention and, all my time on the crisis line, all folks really looking for is connection and to know that I care. And maybe I've got some advice or some guidance or some suggestions for them to consider, but they're really there for the I'm glad you called this is and I'm here for you. Keita Franklin 00:12:25 - 00:12:40 Yes, I've been even pulling the thread on this idea of being present and not always knowing. Like to say. So you might just be physically with them or on a call and you might not have the right words. And that's okay. You did enough by being present. Danny Gladden 00:12:41 - 14:00 Well, I just have. I've been trying to be a good steward of moments and another I just also have great mentors. Another mentor would call that the ministry of Presence. And she, she comes from, she's a therapist and also, a faith leader. And I just think so much about that. The Ministry of Presence, you know, particularly, following a crisis, you'll see, in the media, counselors have been brought in, right? You've been in that, post-crisis debrief, I've done the same and off that there aren't a lot of words, but the ministry of presence, the importance of warmth and connection and folks just knowing that you're there. So, now we're going to where we do a hard pivot. So that's kind of some of the human side and talk about technology. Okay. So as we think about using kind of embedded screening tools, like, I mean there's the Q9 or any of the cuz the Columbia Suicide by Columbia suicide Severity Rating scale, you know, how has embedding these tools and then the, the alerts that might come from them. How is that sort of made an impact? Keita Franklin 00:14:00 - 00:15:11 Well, what's been on my mind recently is just the power of these evidence based screening tools in, to provide burnout prevention for clinicians, particularly when you're embedded into workflows in such a way that clinicians are able to focus on the client front and center and maintain that eye contact and develop that therapeutic rapport and just get on with the business of delivering therapy. And they're not having to fumble through, this paper and this screener and this thing. And, you know, and or they're not on the screen like trying to find 5 or 10 different things based on what their client just told them, like when it's embedded into a workflow and it's just business as usual. Of course, we have to be careful that they're not, you know, treating it as too much of a business as usual, that they're sort of, you know, blindly clicking their way through important assessment tools, which I don't necessarily think would be a problem. But we should always, you know, be mindful for that. But this idea of, just making it part of life into the fabric of the organization, makes it easier for clinicians. And then I think they're able to really think about, okay, I'm on session two, I'm delivering CBT. This is what that looks like, you know, instead of all the other sort of things. Danny Gladden 00:15:11 - 00:16:07 And as we think about the whole of health care, again, we have an opportunity to embed across health care, you know, some really simple suicide screening questions upstream I worry about downstream is the infrastructure there to be able to get someone connected seamlessly into community services? Do we run the risk curve over hospitalizing or creating stigma because we don't know how to respond, to someone's side risk? And so yes, to more screening and also yes to more within the health ecosystem. Getting from custodial services to an, oncology nurse and everyone in between getting the right preparation for what to do when we learn that someone might be at risk of suicide. Keita Franklin 00:16:07 - 00:16:52 Yes. I always talk about suicide screening in the context of, like, be ready for the answers, right? Yes. Yeah. You ready? Yeah. Because, yeah. You don't realize. I mean, of course, the Columbia, Rating scale, suicide severity rating scale can be used by non-medical entities as well. And so that comes with it inherent responsibility to be ready. If you ask the question, you know, do you want to go to sleep and not wake up and they tell you, yes, like you've got to handle that well. And with the careful and grace and respect that it that it deserves, make sure we get them to the right care. And I know we worried in the field, both of us on and the excitement of 988 and making sure the care delivery is in place for, for that new infrastructure. And I think we've come a long way, but there's likely more to do at the community level. Danny Gladden 00:16:52 - 00:17:15 You know, speaking of the now I actually have 988 tattooed on my forearm. I've had enough for a couple of years, but I don't think I considered the now what? Like there are moments that I might not have an interest of going deep with someone, but I think I should wear long sleeves on those days. Keita Franklin 00:17:15 - 00:17:20 Know you will take me to gear. I know you too. Well. Danny Gladden 00:17:20 - 00:17:55 Yeah. So let's talk about AI. Okay. No doubt the promise of AI for good exists. Yes. Right. Yes. You know, it's ambient listening, and what comes from that? The data that can service from things that are missed in a conversation or in the broader, say, record. How can, structured and unstructured data, inform kind of AI decision support, to help risk, is surfaced potential risk. Keita Franklin 00:17:56 - 00:19:13 Well I think that it is amazing to me how much data agencies are sitting on the federal government is sitting on that is untapped, first of all. And then when we can bring good data sources together, like in an ideal world, if we were really, you know, in charge for a day of all things data, like what would it look like for private and public sector to come together around good data and to really use that data to drive like not only like business based efficiencies, but clinical care and outreach that might even go to family members. Like if we're able to learn certain things in the data that tell us, like, okay, this person could benefit from these support systems, which might not go directly to them but would go to their family, which, by the way, is who they go to when they're struggling with risk. First. I just think there's so many opportunities and then we're so scared, right? Like we want to do ethical use of data. We want to be a good stewards in governance, government practices, I'm sorry, governance practices with our data, of course, and we want to secure it in a proper way and just do all the right things. But I never want, to miss a chance to be sitting on data. It's also shameful for sitting on it. We're not using it to advance how we can design a new technology workflow or a new piece of gear that will help our clients do better in a quicker way. Danny Gladden 0019:14 - 00:19:34 Yeah, I think maybe key to that's one of our calls to action. You and I, very excitedly talk about what could we do if in the right seats. The de-identified data to, make a material impact. I think we're in those right seats. Keita Franklin 00:19:34 - 00:19:36 I think You're right. Danny Gladden 00:19:37 - 00:21:00 Yeah. So, we talk so much about the progress of technology and the problems solved by technology. In 2010, I was going to some of the more remote parts of Alaska, and we were working to stand up tele-behavioral health services to communities that didn't have otherwise access. Now think about that. That was, standing up health, tele-behavioral health pre-pandemic, like ten years before the pandemic. You know, and then but yeah, I also just think about folks who don't have access to technology, hardware, bandwidth, 988 is great; not everyone has a phone. Right. And so and then also the it an electronic health record is still not mandated by the federal government for behavioral health organizations. And a and a big and when health systems or disparate community mental health providers have EHRs, the behavioral health data is walled off and the cardiologist doesn't know about the depression diagnosis or that the prior substance use treatment. And so, despite the progress where this technology is still far short in supporting, suicide prevention. Keita Franklin 00:21:00 - 00:22:45 I mean, I think one of the big things that I've seen recently that may or may not hit on some of the things you're discussing is, people's fear around the use of technology in the field of mental health. Right? Like back when you were doing your Alaska work, which I've loved to follow over the years. Just because is there a better petri dish for learning about rural areas and how to deliver care? I mean, that's just got to be it. But, people worried in the day that even delivering mental health care, tele therapy, if someone was at risk for suicide, they would say, I can't do it right because they're in their own home. What if they're near a firearm or they're in their own home? Well, if they're not getting care, they're in their own home too. So I was pleased to see Covid at least get us through that hump in the field of like, deliver care when and where people need it. Like in the absence of them coming in in person, like they still need it. And so that's one thing. But otherwise, I know people are hesitant to fully adopt certain types of technology right now and into the mental health because they're afraid it will go rogue like that. The technology will take over, it will get in the way of the human relationship that our, our careers were built on. And I sort of think like it should always be an adjunct to care, like we should never be back in the day where you're just waiting for your one hour session with your psychotherapist that you have to drive, you know, perhaps an hour to get to in traffic in DC or wherever. And then you're home all throughout the week with nothing that you could, like, have as a self-help tool or no technology that could send you push reminders or like, there's just so many ways it could be used that people are hesitant in our field. And I'm hoping that, you know, that that's coming around little by little through use cases and, you know, letting them get in there and see that it does no harm and actually can help. Danny Gladden 00:22:46 - 00:23:13 Our time goes by fast here, Keita, as we close, I'll share that in Oracle Health. We're deeply committed to behavioral health innovation supporting suicide prevention. Through our work and data and care coordination, user centered technology, consumer facing technology. Just what encouragement would you offer to colleagues, partners, health systems, around prioritizing suicide prevention in their work? Keita Franklin 00:23:14 - 00:24:11 I would I appreciate the question and I would definitely say like we push it out during suicide Prevention Month, like it should be an all month, all hands, all the time, effort and sustained over time. And so like we should continue to do everything we can to advance the data science to push for innovation. If the numbers of death by suicide in our nation weren't what they were, I could maybe agree with people that are kind of at a place where saying, oh, we don't need new technology or new innovations, but that's not our current state. The data continues to rise, particularly with vulnerable populations like veterans and service members and those in rural America, as we've talked about. So we need to continue to think strategically about technology innovation and then do our tried and true things that you and I talked about being kind of making sure people feel connected and increase their social supports. All of those protective factors are important to weave into the fabric of people's lives. Like sustained all the time. Danny Gladden 00:24:12 - 00:25:59 I couldn't agree more. I'll mention, around the world, communities have access to a variation of a suicide or crisis line. In the U.S. and Canada, that three digit number is 988. It is available 24-7-365. There are prompts for Spanish speaking. There are prompts for our veterans. There's, ability to text into a crisis text line. I always ask if folks will say, well, how bad should I be when I call or whatnot? And my response is, if you consider calling, do call. You can always be anonymous, although it is helpful if you feel comfortable to share who you are, you can also help someone else call who might. It might be a challenge for them. You can call with them. And, I think finally, it's there are no hopefully in health care. There are no wrong doors. But health care is just one avenue. Whether it's communities of faith, community support organizations, and schools and universities, there are helpers everywhere we look. We just have to reach out. And as a helper, we need to be warm care, kind and compassionate. And so Dr. Keita Franklin, Leidos, thank you for the partnership. Thank you for the work that's happening. And that's all for this episode of Perspectives on Health and Tech. Thank you for listening. And join us again for the next insightful episode of Perspectives on Health and Tech. Outro 00:25:59 - 00:26:29 That's all for this episode of Perspectives on Health and Tech Podcast. Be sure to subscribe to catch all our future episodes! For more information from industry experts, visit oracle.com/Health and oracle.com/life-Sciences, or follow Oracle Health and Oracle Life Sciences on social media. Thank you for listening and join us again for the next insightful episode of Perspectives on Health and Tech.