Posted on Sep 15, 2014
How is the Army doing on suicide prevention training? Are we more prepared?
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Given that the Army has designated September as Suicide Prevention Month, I'm wondering how my fellow Soldiers think we are doing on training our force? I remember the old suicide prevention training back in the day. We were basically told to watch for people that seemed depressed or were giving away their possessions. We seem to have come a long way toward training our Soldiers and helping those who are having a hard time dealing with life, but has it really helped? Do you think we as Soldiers (or any service members) are better prepared today to deal with this subject than we were 10 years ago? What is the most important aspect of the program that you think is having or has had an impact?
http://www.army.mil/article/132974/Army_Suicide_Awareness_Month
http://www.army.mil/article/132974/Army_Suicide_Awareness_Month
Edited 10 y ago
Posted 10 y ago
Responses: 7
Not as long as the suicide prevention is presented as another boring PowerPoint to endure. "Next slide. Suicide statistics. PTSD. More numbers. Next slide."
I feel strongly on this subject and the way it has been treated is utter bullshit.
I feel strongly on this subject and the way it has been treated is utter bullshit.
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1SG Chris Brown
I agree with you that it needs to be more than just a kill-me-with-PowerPoint event. That does little to improve and everyone just wants to get the heck out of there. We actually had a pretty good event recently here in DC. The Military District of Washington (MDW) hosted MG (R) Graham and his wife to discuss some of the stigmas and how we get beyond them. They had a son in ROTC who killed himself and eight months later lost their other son to an IED in Iraq. It was a very heartbreaking story, but has a very powerful message of how we need to get beyond the stigmas so we can truly address the problems. I enjoy these type of events and actually get something out of it as opposed to just showing me some stats on who has been killing themselves by rank, age, and sex. To advance this discussion, we need to go beyond simple numbers and stats!
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I would submit that the sensitization of everyone trained to be on the lookout for people in danger of - and the danger signs of - suicide is a very good thing. If it saves just one life, it's worth the time and energy required.
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1SG Chris Brown
I guess there's the key. Are we, or have we, saved any lives as a result of training? That's a very hard metric to measure really. I think there is value to the training so long as it isn't just another boring class that people only attend because they are forced to.
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I'm sorry to say that I don't think we will ever have a good handle on the Problem but that doesn't mean we shouldn't shoot for the Goal of Eliminating this problem and who could complain about improving the Mental Health Services to our Veterans.
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1SG Chris Brown
Not to say that I don't care about our Veterans, because I definitely do (I'm about to be one afterall). But I'm more looking at how our current military personnel are affected. I hope that the VA and other outside services are assisting our Veterans (though I'm not overly confident on that), but it's not the Veterans sitting through continuous suicide prevention training classes discussing why our Soldiers are killing themselves by the hundreds every year. Are we even making an impact? Or are we just trying to make it look like we're doing something? I want to think that we are making a difference, but it sure doesn't seem that way. And at the same time we're talking about all the stress we're causing with deployments and military life in general, we're increasing anxiety by beginning the draw down which will leave even more uncertain about their future.
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
I concur Chris, The Military is great at teaching us to kill our fellow human beings and how to use wonderful high tech killing equipment but other stuff it kinda drops the ball at.
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