Victorian Suicide Prevention and Response Strategy Accountability Framework 2024-2034
Overview
Victoria's suicide prevention accountability framework (2024-2034) establishes roles, responsibilities, and monitoring systems for government departments, agencies, and community partners. It emphasizes whole-of-government collaboration, Aboriginal self-determination, lived experience involvement, regular reporting, risk management, and continuous learning to achieve the strategy's vision of reducing suicide across Victoria.
Key insights
Key Insights:
- Whole-of-government approach - All departments and agencies share accountability for suicide prevention outcomes
- Community-wide responsibility - Everyone in Victoria has a role in reducing suicide and stigma
- Aboriginal self-determination prioritized - Framework commits to supporting Aboriginal communities' self-determined suicide prevention approaches
- Lived experience central - People with suicide experience embedded in governance, decision-making, and evaluation processes
- Department of Health leads - Owns strategy development, coordination, reporting, and accountability across all partners
- Annual public reporting required - Transparent progress updates with community engagement to maintain accountability
- Risk monitoring embedded - Systematic identification, mitigation, and management of risks across all strategy partners
- Continuous review cycles - Regular evaluation and adaptation based on evidence, Treaty progress, and community feedback
Did this resource draw on transformative evidence?
This document is primarily governance-focused rather than evidence-based. While it incorporates lived experience perspectives through advisory committees and consultation processes, it's essentially a structural framework outlining roles, responsibilities, and accountability mechanisms. The evidence base comes from community engagement and Royal Commission recommendations, not research or experiential data on suicide prevention effectiveness.
This document reflects significant practice wisdom from government administration, suicide prevention sector expertise, and lived experience contributors. It draws on Royal Commission findings, existing Victorian Government frameworks, and collaborative input from practitioners across departments, agencies, and community experts. However, it's primarily an organizational framework rather than practice-based intervention guidance.
This document has limited research and evaluation foundation. While it references the Royal Commission's findings and aligns with existing government frameworks, it's primarily a governance structure document. It establishes future evaluation mechanisms and monitoring systems but doesn't appear to be directly informed by systematic research evidence on suicide prevention accountability effectiveness.
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Categories
Resource type
Practice Guideline