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VA'S SUICIDE HOTLINE SERVES AS A BEACON
TO VETERANS --
Calls are flooding the Canandaigua-based suicide
prevention
hotline created for veterans and their loved
ones, at
a rate of about 135 calls per day.

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-------------------------
Suicide hotline serves as beacon to veterans
Chris Swingle
Staff writer
Calls are flooding the Canandaigua-based suicide prevention hotline
created for veterans and their loved ones — at a rate of about 135 calls
per day.
The national hotline, established by the Canandaigua Veterans Affairs
Medical Center on July 25, fielded 12,322 calls in its first three months,
one-fourth from veterans, prompting the center to boost its staffing by a
third.
Nearly 200 callers have needed immediate response because they talked of
suicide and had a gun or other means nearby, or had already ingested
pills, said Janet Kemp, the V.A.'s national suicide prevention
coordinator.
The Department of Veterans Affairs launched the hotline at a time when
national reports revealed troubling deficiencies in care for veterans.
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Investigative media reports in February cited
substandard care at Walter Reed Army Medical Center. Then two federal
reports, in July and September, criticized both mental and physical health
care for veterans and called for sweeping changes. Among other reforms,
the Department of Defense was urged to address its acute shortage of
mental health clinicians.
The V.A. is the largest provider of mental health care in the nation. More
than 9,000 mental health professionals, backed by primary care physicians
and other health professionals in every V.A. medical center and outpatient
clinic, provide care to about 1 million veterans each year.
About $3 billion will be spent on mental health services this year by the
V.A. Officials were not able last week to provide a budget figure for the
Canandaigua hotline.
When the critical media reports were released, the hotline was already in
the works but its heavy use highlights the need for such services.
Indeed, at least 283 combat veterans who left the military between the
start of the war in Afghanistan on Oct. 7, 2001, and the end of 2005 took
their own lives, according to preliminary V.A. research obtained by The
Associated Press. The rate is similar to the suicide rate among
nonveterans, but that time period doesn't include many veterans who served
or are serving in Iraq.
"A specialized service is a very good thing," said Jim Vanderpool of
Rochester, who served in the Army in Korea and is commander of Patchen-Briggs
Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 307. "Life's burdens are tough enough for
everybody. You add the carnage of war, it affects the individual psyche
more."
How it works
The veterans' hotline is an offshoot of the long-standing national suicide
hotline and doesn't have a separate phone number. Callers hear a recording
inviting veterans or those calling in concern for a veteran to press 1.
Those who do are transferred to the call center in Canandaigua, which now
employs 35 people.
In addition to the hotline, the V.A. established a follow-up coordinator
at each of the 153 V.A. medical centers nationwide to check in with every
veteran who calls the suicide hotline and is willing to be contacted.
Of the 10 area veterans who've accepted follow-up contact, seven served in
Vietnam and three served in Iraq, said Lynn Abaied, a licensed social
worker hired by the Canandaigua V.A. to provide those follow-ups in the
Rochester-Canandaigua region.
"All of them are in treatment, either for PTSD — post-traumatic stress
disorder — or major depression," said Abaied.
Levels of risk for service members who have yet to return home is not yet
known, but previous studies have found that combat trauma elevates suicide
risk.
Post-traumatic stress disorder, depression and problem drinking can double
or triple a person's risk, yet the rate of suicide among people with these
conditions is still quite low, said Dr. Ira Katz, the V.A.'s deputy chief
patient care service officer for mental health.
Vietnam veterans were at higher risk for suicide for up to five years
after that war, but veterans of the first Gulf War weren't found to be at
any different risk for suicide than the public overall, said Kerry L.
Knox, an associate professor at the University of Rochester Medical Center
who this year became director of suicide research efforts at the
Canandaigua V.A.
Canandaigua's facility is one of three V.A. centers in the nation
designated "centers of excellence" to research veterans' mental health
issues and share the findings in an effort to improve care throughout the
V.A. system.
Too late for Jeffrey
A hotline and especially the follow-up for veterans are good ideas that
should have started years ago, said Kevin Lucey of Belchertown, Mass., who
filed suit in July against the Department of Veterans Affairs alleging
wrongful death and medical malpractice.
Lucey's son, Jeffrey Lucey, who'd enlisted in the Marine Reserves after
graduating from high school, committed suicide June 22, 2004, at home,
nearly a year after returning from Iraq. He was 23.
"It was too late for Jeff and it was too late for so many others," said
Kevin Lucey, who with his wife, Joyce, spoke in Rochester in September at
a screening of The Ground Truth, a documentary about service members'
struggles after returning from Iraq.
Follow-up care for suicidal veterans is critical, Lucey said Thursday by
cell phone from his son's grave site, which he often visits.
Jeff at first refused to go to the V.A. because of the stigma of admitting
a mental health problem, said Lucey, who is a therapist. But the young
veteran finally saw a local therapist who referred him to the V.A.
hospital, where Jeff spent three days on suicide watch over Memorial Day
weekend 2004.
At home, days later, he was despondent but unwilling to return to the
hospital, where he'd felt like a prisoner. His mother called the V.A.,
which told them for the first time of the Veterans Outreach Center in
their area. Jeff met with a mental health counselor for three hours and
was scheduled to be seen three times a week.
On June 21, Jeff was in a rage and suicidal, his father said. They each
talked to the veterans center by phone and Jeff calmed down. For the
second time in a week, the 5-foot-10, 130-pound Jeff asked to sit on his
father's lap, said Lucey. They rocked for 45 minutes.
Jeff seemed OK the next day when his father went to work. After work,
Lucey found that Jeff had hung himself in the cellar.
'Everybody's business'
Today, if a veteran calls the new suicide hotline in imminent crisis, the
hotline workers summon community emergency responders.
And training has been instituted for V.A. employees at all levels,
including those who deliver trays of food or empty the trash, so workers
can recognize signs of suicide and speak up. If someone says he'd be
better off dead or that you won't have to worry about him much longer
because he won't be around, nobody should ignore that, said Kemp, who's
also associate director of education and training for the suicide research
center of excellence.
People should say, "Are you serious about that? Do you need help?" said
Kemp. "People will tell you the answers if you ask the questions."
"Suicide is everybody's business," said Kemp. Training materials are going
to all V.A. staff and community partners this week.
The hotline in Canandaigua is a partnership of the V.A. and the Substance
Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration of the Department of
Health and Human Services, which is the federal agency that for years has
managed the federal suicide hotline.
Special service for veterans as well as the hotline number are supposed to
be widely publicized at veterans centers, in publications and online, but
still some people don't know the hotline exists.
"I never heard of it," Eddie Israel, a World War II Air Force veteran,
said last week while volunteering at the Veterans Outreach Center's
computer resource center in Rochester. He gets care through the V.A. and
doesn't remember seeing or hearing anything there, either.
Patty Gilg of York, Livingston County, said her son, Kyle, seems to be
doing well since returning home in August, but his Marine unit suffered
many injuries and casualties in Iraq. Gilg roundly approves of the new
suicide hotline for veterans.
"We definitely need to take care of them."
CSWINGLE@DemocratandChronicle.com
-------------------------
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