The United States should adopt a national suicide-prevention policy that focuses on where much of the danger actually occurs: the home. In 2022, about 49,000 people died by suicide in the United States. The most common location was a house or apartment, at 71.5% of cases. More than half of suicides involved a firearm, and alcohol was common among those tested: 40.1% were alcohol-positive, and among those positives, 64.1% had a blood alcohol concentration at or above 0.08 g/dL. A national policy that does not directly address acute home crises, lethal means, and intoxication is missing a large part of the problem.
Current federal policy provides a strong framework, but it does not yet give families and front-line responders a simple national rule for the first dangerous hours of a home crisis. The 2024 National Strategy for Suicide Prevention is a whole-of-society plan. Its Federal Action Plan calls for suicide care pathways, 988 and mobile-crisis coordination, and stronger evaluation of prevention efforts. SAMHSA’s 2025 crisis-care guidelines also say crisis services should be person-centered, family-focused, and provide the right level of care at the right time.
This proposal would add one missing operational standard: when a person is at acute suicide risk and appears intoxicated or otherwise acutely destabilized, federally supported crisis systems should activate a short-term home protocol built around continuous awake, in-person supervision—what I would call home “eyesight supervision”—when home management is clinically appropriate and can be made safe. This is not a substitute for emergency care. It is a time-buying intervention for an acute window when the person should not be left alone. NIMH’s clinical guidance already states that a person with current suicidal thoughts cannot be left alone, and NIMH’s public guidance tells helpers to be there, help keep the person safe, connect them to 988, and follow up.
The corrections system offers a useful but limited lesson. DOJ guidance found that many jail suicides clustered in the first hours after intake, and Bureau of Justice Statistics data show that local jail suicide rates fell from 129 per 100,000 inmates in 1983 to 47 in 2002. That does not prove that homes are the same as jails, but it does show that early identification, close observation, and safer environments can matter during acute-risk windows. At the same time, a VA systematic review found no direct studies showing that one-to-one sitters alone reduce suicide or self-harm, so a responsible national policy should treat home eyesight supervision as one part of a broader package and should pilot it before scaling it.
Under this proposal, HHS and SAMHSA should issue a National Acute Home Stabilization Protocol for use by 988 centers, mobile crisis teams, emergency departments, certified community behavioral health clinics, VA facilities, primary care practices, and hospital discharge planners. The protocol should apply when a person is suicidal or recently suicidal, appears intoxicated or rapidly worsening, and can remain at home only if a responsible adult is physically present and the environment can be secured. If the person is medically unstable, violent, cannot be safely supervised, or has immediate intent that cannot be contained, the protocol should require escalation to emergency evaluation rather than home management. This proposal fits naturally inside the federal crisis-care structure already being built around care pathways, 988, and mobile crisis.
The protocol should have five required elements. First, continuous awake in-person presence for a defined acute period, such as until sobriety or formal clinical reassessment. Second, immediate lethal-means safety, including temporary off-site storage or secure locking of firearms, medications, and other dangerous items; VA guidance already emphasizes secure household storage options. Third, a warm handoff to 988, which SAMHSA describes as 24/7 support for mental health, substance use, and suicidal crisis. Fourth, rapid access to mobile crisis or urgent telehealth evaluation when risk remains elevated. Fifth, mandatory follow-up within 24 hours and again within 7 days, because ongoing contact matters and multicomponent follow-up models such as ED-SAFE have reduced later suicidal behaviors.
To make this real national policy rather than guidance on paper, Congress should direct HHS to launch a five-year multi-state demonstration under the 2024 National Strategy and Federal Action Plan. SAMHSA should write the operational guidance. NIH and CDC should evaluate outcomes. CMS should create reimbursement pathways for crisis safety planning, caregiver coaching, mobile crisis response, and follow-up contacts. States should be allowed to use demonstration funds for lockboxes, medication lock bags, transportation, and temporary caregiver support. Goal 15 of the National Strategy already calls for improved data, research, and evaluation, and the Federal Action Plan already contemplates evidence-based interventions, care pathways, and more prompt access to mobile crisis teams.
The demonstration should be judged by hard outcomes, not good intentions. Metrics should include suicide attempts, suicide deaths, emergency-department revisits, use of 988 and mobile crisis, successful lethal-means securing, follow-up completion, caregiver burden, rural access, racial equity, and rates of coercive emergency intervention. The policy should also test the question the current literature has not yet answered directly: whether home eyesight supervision adds benefit beyond safety planning, means safety, and follow-up alone. That is why pilot testing is essential. The strongest current evidence is for multicomponent care, not for supervision by itself.
In plain terms, the national policy change should be this: when suicide risk is acute and the crisis is unfolding at home—especially when intoxication is part of the picture—the United States should not rely on advice alone. It should activate a standard, family-focused, evidence-tested home stabilization response: be there, secure the environment, connect the person to 988 and crisis care, and follow up. That is more defensible than a stand-alone “watch them” mandate, more consistent with current federal strategy, and more likely to save lives if it is piloted, measured, and improved.
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