No Family Should Face Suicide Alone.

Immediate access to proven, evidence-based care, when hope is needed most.

No Family Should Face Suicide Alone.

Immediate access to proven, evidence-based care, when hope is needed most.

Hope Can’t Wait. Neither Should Help.

When someone is struggling with thoughts of suicide, every moment matters.

But too often, families searching for help run into a painful reality: the care that could save a life is out of reach.

We believe that should never happen.

Together in Hope Foundation connects people in crisis with immediate access to proven, evidence-based suicide treatment, so no one has to face their darkest moment alone.

Behind Every Number Is a Life That Matters

Every year in the United States, more than 16.6 million people struggle with serious thoughts of suicide, over 2.3 million people attempt to take their lives, and nearly 50,000 lives are lost. Those numbers are heartbreaking: but suicide isn’t really about numbers.

It’s about a son who suddenly becomes quiet and withdrawn.

A daughter who feels like the world would be better without her.
A parent who stays up at night wondering how to help their child.
A friend who seems okay on the outside but is silently falling apart.

Behind every statistic is a real person. A real family. A moment when someone needed hope.

At Together in Hope Foundation, we believe something deeply important:
Suicide is preventable when people can get the right help at the right time.

But for many families, the biggest barrier to that help is cost and access. That’s where we come in.

6.6 million

people struggle with serious thoughts of suicide.

2.3 million

people attempt suicide.

50,000

lives are lost.

Our Approach to Suicide Prevention

Research consistently shows that suicide-focused outpatient care using evidence-based therapies can significantly reduce suicidal thoughts and behaviors.

That’s why our work centers on connecting people with treatments that are proven to help, including:

Collaborative Assessment and Management of Suicidality (CAMS)
Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)

These approaches focus directly on the pain and circumstances that lead to suicidal thinking, helping individuals develop real strategies for coping, safety, and recovery.

Our programs prioritize care that is compassionate, accessible, and centered on the individual.