Mental Health First Aid Vs Asist

Mental Health First Aid vs ASIST: Which Course Is Right for You?

12 January 2026 |

As awareness of mental health continues to grow across UK workplaces, many organisations are investing in formal training to better support their people. Two of the most recognised options are Mental Health First Aid (MHFA) and ASIST (Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training).

While both courses play an important role in improving wellbeing and safety, they serve different purposes. Understanding the difference can help you choose the training that best fits your role, responsibilities and workplace needs.

Understanding the focus of each course

Mental Health First Aid (MHFA)

Mental Health First Aid focuses on early support and intervention.

The course teaches learners how to recognise signs of poor mental health, start supportive conversations, and guide individuals towards appropriate help. It is designed to reduce stigma, build confidence, and create a more open and supportive workplace culture.

MHFA is about being approachable and supportive, not diagnosing or treating mental health conditions.

ASIST – Applied Suicide Intervention Skills Training

ASIST focuses on intervention in high-risk situations.

This course equips learners with the skills to recognise when someone may be at risk of suicide and respond directly and compassionately. It teaches participants how to have open conversations about suicide, assess immediate risk, and develop safety plans to support individuals towards professional help.

ASIST is practical, skills-based and action-focused.

Key differences at a glance

Area

Mental Health First Aid (MHFA)

ASIST

Primary focus

Awareness & early support

Suicide intervention

Level of intervention

Preventative

Immediate & critical

Typical conversations

Mental wellbeing, stress, anxiety, low mood

Suicidal thoughts and risk

Confidence needed

Supportive listening

Direct, safety-focused action

Suitable for

Mental health champions, managers, teams

Supervisors, leaders, responders

Course length

2 days

2 days

Course style

Supportive, discussion-based

Structured, skills-based

Which course should you choose?

Choose MHFA if:

  • You want to build mental health awareness across your organisation
  • You’re looking to support colleagues at an early stage
  • Your role involves people management or wellbeing support
  • You want a widely recognised qualification that supports workplace culture

MHFA is ideal for creating a strong foundation of mental health understanding.

Choose ASIST if:

  • You may encounter people at risk of suicide
  • Your role involves responsibility for others’ safety or welfare
  • You want practical skills to respond in critical situations
  • You need confidence to have direct, life-saving conversations

ASIST is suited to higher-risk environments and leadership roles.

Do some organisations choose both?

Yes — and for good reason.
Many organisations use MHFA to create a culture of openness and early support, while training selected individuals in ASIST to respond effectively if a situation escalates.
Together, the courses provide a layered approach to mental health support:

  • MHFA helps spot and support early signs
  • ASIST prepares people to act when risk is immediate

Mental health training in high-risk industries

In sectors such as construction, manufacturing and logistics, mental health challenges can be intensified by long hours, physical demands and high-pressure environments.

Combining awareness-based training with intervention skills can significantly strengthen workplace wellbeing and duty of care.

Training with Mast Safety

Mast Safety delivers both MHFA and ASIST training in a professional, supportive environment, with experienced instructors and a strong focus on real-world application.

If you’re unsure which course is right for you or your organisation, our team is happy to help you choose the most appropriate option.

Ready to take the next step?

Explore our Mental Health First Aid and ASIST courses, or contact Mast Safety for advice on building a mental health training programme that works for your team.

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