Men account for the majority of suicides in the United Kingdom, yet many delay seeking help due to gendered norms that discourage emotional disclosure and position vulnerability as socially risky. Everyday environments where men routinely engage in familiar, informal conversation may, therefore, offer opportunities for earlier intervention. This evaluation examined the Mind in Bexley Ambassador Project, which trained barbers, hair stylists, and tattoo artists to recognize emotional distress, initiate supportive dialogue, and signpost to local services. A total of 61 ambassadors completed training, including 24 barbers, 32 hair stylists, and 5 tattoo artists. Quantitative confidence measures, activity logs, and qualitative interviews assessed feasibility, acceptability, and early outcomes. Ambassadors reported increased confidence in recognizing distress, asking directly about suicide, and referring to support, with 1,818 mental health-related conversations and 265 signposting interactions (including provision of service-information leaflets) recorded over 7 months. Emotional disclosure typically emerged gradually across repeat appointments, where trust and familiarity were already established. Brief, evidence-informed training supported ambassadors to respond more intentionally and confidently to distress without altering the informal character of these grooming environments. The intervention legitimized and strengthened existing relational practices, positioning barbershops, salons, and tattoo studios as low-threshold, socially safe settings where distress may be recognized and voiced before reaching a crisis point. Embedding proportionate training, reflective supervision, and clear referral pathways into such everyday spaces offers a scalable and culturally congruent approach to suicide prevention for men.
Palmer et al. (Thu,) studied this question.