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Jul-05-2007 14:35printcomments

National Suicide Crisis Hot Line Planned for Veterans

"A Call for Help Needs Immediate Response"- Secretary of Veterans Affairs Jim Nicholson


Image by Tim King

(WASHINGTON, D.C.) - To ensure veterans with mental health crises have immediate access to trained coordinators, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) will establish a 24-hour, national suicide prevention hot line.

The public release from the government has been issued, but the phone number still apparently does not exist. Veterans need to call the VA and ask for that number, we will publish the hotline number when it is issued.

Still, Secretary of Veterans Affairs Jim Nicholson says it is a significant step to ensure that veterans, "particularly the newest generation of combat vets returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, receive accessible and compassionate care for their mental health concerns.”

The hot line, which is scheduled to begin operations by August 31, 2007, will be based at the Canandaigua VA Medical Center in New York state. Staffed by mental health professionals, it will operate seven days a week, 24 hours a day.

In addition to staffing the hot line, the suicide prevention coordinators will take part in training clinicians and non-clinicians on warning signs for suicide, guide veterans into care and work within facilities to identify veterans at risk for suicide.

VA’s Canandaigua facility is already a VA center of excellence focused on suicide prevention, mental health education and research.

VA has the nation’s largest mental health program. The Department recently announced plans to provide suicide prevention coordinators at each of its 153 medical centers, joining more than 9,000 mental health professionals.

Mental health services are provided at each of VA’s 153 medical centers and more than 900 outpatient clinics. Last month, Nicholson announced an initiative to hire 100 new employees to provide readjustment counseling at each of the Department’s 207 community-based Vet Centers.

In July, VA will convene a four-day mental health forum in Washington with the Department’s top mental health professionals to review a wide range of issues, such as integrating mental health services with primary care, combat trauma, suicide prevention and the special needs of the newest generation of combat veterans.
Source: VA




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