Conservative MP calls for nationwide three-digit suicide hotline - Action News
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Conservative MP calls for nationwide three-digit suicide hotline

As health professionals warn that the pandemic is taking aheavy toll on many Canadians' mental health, aConservative MP is calling on the federal government to set upa national hotline forsuicide prevention.

Calls to one national suicide prevention line have risen 200 per cent over last year

A nationwide suicide hotline service is reporting a spike in demand since the pandemic hit. One Conservative backbencher says the time has come for a 3-digit nationwide suicide hotline. (suriyachan/Shutterstock)

As health professionals warn that the pandemic is taking aheavy toll on many Canadians' mental health, aConservative MP is calling on the federal government to set upa national hotline forsuicide prevention.

Todd Doherty, MP forCariboo-Prince George, recentlytabled a motion in Parliament to bring together existing suicide prevention services under one national, three-digit phone number:988.

"I believe that we must do everything in our power to prepare for that onslaught of mental health issues and challenges that we're going to face due to COVID," said Doherty.

"When they're at that point where they want to ask for help, a simple, easy, three-digit number to remember could make the difference between a life saved and a life lost."

Mental health professionals have been pushing for a nationwide hotline as well. Dr. Allison Crawford is the chief medical officer of the Canada Suicide Prevention Service, which operates a national 10-digit, 24-hour hotline for suicide prevention services.

'A barrier that doesn't need to exist'

Since COVID hit, she said, the service has seen a 200 per cent increase in demand. A three-digit hotline would be easier for people in distress to access, she said, while a national program would signal to them that the federal government seeshelping themas a priority.

"In a crisis, looking for a 10 digit number is a barrier a barrier that doesn't need to exist,"said Dr. Crawford, who is also a psychiatrist with the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health.

Establishing a single, nationwide suicide hotlinewould involve linking together existing crisis services that now operate locally or regionally.The Canada Suicide Prevention Servicehotline, which receives federal funding, is currently connected to roughly10 of Canada's more than 200 localdistress centres something Dr. Crawford said she and her team are working to improve.

The United States is in the midst of adopting a988 hotline, but that process is expected to take four years and cost more than half a billion dollars in its first year of operation.

Canada could get it done faster, said Dr. Crawford, as long as the federal and provincial governmentscome together.

"I'm optimistic we can hopefully get that done within the next one to two years," she said, adding that the project will require support from multiple political parties.

"I think there's growing support and there are very willing and enthusiastic partners in creating this."

Conservative B.C. MP Todd Doherty: (Todd Doherty/Youtube)

Doherty said he is convinced a national hotlinewouldspare some others the pain heexperienced when his best friend at age14 died by suicide.

"All these years later, I still have so many questions," said Doherty, who was named special adviser to Conservative Leader Erin O'Tooleon mental health and wellness.

"I was probably one of the last ones to see, if not the last one to see, my friend alive. I just wish I could see them again and I've said it publicly tell them that I love them ..."

In the years since his friend's death, Doherty has devoted time to suicide prevention and working with at-risk youth.Five years ago,he began pushing a private member's bill on establishinga federal framework to recognize the symptoms ofpost-traumatic stress disorder.That workconnected him withmanyCanadians in distress anda lot of first responders.

'The grief ... only grows greater'

He describedspeaking at the funeral of a young woman who died by suicide last year how the looks on the faces of the young people gathered to mourntheir friend reminded him of his own anguish at the same age.

"The grief one feels and experiences from suicide, I think it only grows greater as the years go by, because that sense of loss grows greater," he said. "You understand what you've really, truly lost in terms of friendship, in terms of loved ones."

Doherty said he hopes to see his motion come up for debate in Parliament in the coming weeks. His preliminary conversations with other political parties have been encouraging, he added.

"We have to be better. We have to be better not just [in] creating hope but [also] breaking down that barrier and breaking down that stigma so people feel comfortable coming forward," he said.

Hajdu open to 'exploring'hotline idea

In a mediastatement, Health Minister Patty Hajdu's office offered no clear commitment to a national hotline but said the idea is worth studying.

"Our government is committed to exploring how a three digit prevention number can be implemented," the statement reads.

Hajdu's office also pointed to other federalefforts to supportCanadians' mental resilienceduring the pandemic.The government set up an online portal Wellness Together Canada which offers mental health and substance use supports, individual counselling, monitored support groups and mental wellness programs. Hajdu's office said that,as of last month, more than 530,000 Canadians had accessed the portal.

The United States has committed to putting a national 988 hotline in place by 2022.

U.S. Congress and President Donald Trump began a push for the hotline in 2018, when they launcheda study ofoptions toreplacethe country's 1-800 suicide preventionhotline with an easy-to-remember, three-digit option.

Trump signed the National Suicide Hotline Designation Act into law inOctober.The project will cost approximately $570 million US in the first year, according to a report by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). Almost half of that sum is a one-time outlayto replace switches in the phone network, while some of the money will go to boostingcall centre capacity and a public awareness campaign.

The FCC concluded the service would be worth the money, saying the life-saving benefits would outweigh the cost of implementation.

Dr. Crawford saidthe CanadaSuicide Prevention Service is working with the Mental Health Commission of Canada to survey Canadians on the idea ofa three-digit national hotline. She said theyhope to release a white paper on the subject in the new year.

"Suicide is preventable," she said."It's important to say that every time."


Where to get help:

Canada Suicide Prevention Service:1-833-456-4566 (Phone) |45645 (Text, 4 p.m. to midnight ET only)crisisservicescanada.ca

In Quebec (French):Association qubcoise de prvention du suicide: 1-866-APPELLE (1-866-277-3553)

Kids Help Phone: 1-800-668-6868 (Phone), Live Chat counselling atwww.kidshelpphone.ca

Canadian Association for Suicide Prevention:Find a 24-hour crisis centre


If you're worried someone you know may be at risk of suicide, you should talk to them about it,says theCanadian Association forSuicide Prevention.Here aresomewarning signs:

Suicidal thoughts.
Substance abuse.
Purposelessness.
Anxiety.
Feeling trapped.
Hopelessness and helplessness.
Withdrawal.
Anger.
Recklessness.
Mood changes.

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