It is time to make a difference in your community. It is time to stand with those who are suffering.
September is suicide prevention month. Take time to find, list, and highlight organizations that can save a life. Find out what resources are available in your community and share those resources. No matter where you live, your community has access to a local, state, or national group that helps people at-risk of suicide.
Possible organizations include: crisis centers, hospitals, churches, charities, call centers, veteran groups, along with schools and universities. It is also important to know the warning signs and symptoms of people at risk. Take time to educate yourself, take a class, or attend a survivors of suicide support group.
Suicide is a tremendous problem in our communities and our society. It hurts spouses, children, parents, extended families, friends, and co-workers. When it is all said and done, suicide impacts everyone. Take action this September. Make a difference in your community. If you find a meaningful website, share it with your friends. If you attend an ASIST class, tell people how to intervene. Your actions and words of encouragement could help to save a life.
President Signs Order to Increase Behavioral Health Services for Veterans
Posted in News & Commentary, Suicide Prevention, Veteran Resources, tagged army, current events, mental-health, military, military family, national guard, suicide, suicide hotline, suicide prevention, veterans on September 4, 2012| 3 Comments »
President Obama signed an executive order directing federal agencies to expand suicide prevention strategies and improve access to mental health and substance abuse treatment for veterans, service members, and their families.
Citing an obligation to “build an integrated network of support capable of providing effective mental health services,” the order includes an array of directions for the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Department of Health and Human Services, and other federal agencies. Collaboration with community-based providers, including community mental health clinics and substance abuse treatment facilities, was specifically required, particularly for areas where the Department of Veterans Affairs has had challenges in providing timely access to services for veterans. In addition, the Department of Veterans Affairs and the Department of Health and Human Services must expand the capacity of the Veterans Crisis Line by 50% and “ensure that any veteran identifying him or herself as being in crisis connects with a mental health professional or trained mental health worker within 24 hours.”
The Department of Veterans Affairs will also work with the Department of Defense to establish a national, 12-month suicide prevention campaign focused on connecting veterans to mental health services, officials reported.
To ensure veterans have access to these services, the executive order also calls on the VA and HHS to establish at least 15 pilot sites where VA can partner with local mental health providers. This initiative, officials said, will help ensure services are available in regions where VA has had trouble hiring or placing providers.
The order also directs VA and HHS to develop a plan to increase access to mental health care in rural communities.
The Veterans Crisis Line is a confidential hotline where veterans and family members can immediately connect with trained professionals during a time of crisis. The toll-free hotline is 1-800-273-8255.
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