According to the Oklahoma State Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse, there were 872 suicides in Oklahoma in 2022. More than 9% of those were identified as Native Americans. That’s the same year the new 988 suicide prevention hotline was rolled out. The department reported the 988 call line received more than 40,000 calls and 10,000 text messages.
The Wichita Affiliated Tribes, located in Anadarko, Oklahoma, coordinated the 988 Mental Health Lifeline Summit which included tribal nations to share stories and resources on how to help those in crisis. The summit included 988 grantees including the Cheyenne and Arapaho Tribes, Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, Comanche Nation, Muscogee Creek Nation, Iowa Tribe of Oklahoma, Osage Nation, and Southern Plains Tribal Health Board.
The Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration also participated in the conference along with Oklahoma’s 988 call center Solari.
“I just want to thank you all for being here because it is important and it’s important that we get these programs out into our communities,” Terri Parton, President of the Wichita Affiliated Tribes told those in attendance. “Not just Native communities, but all communities, because our families are intermarried and we serve that whole community.”
Parton shared some personal experiences with the audience about family and community members that were lost to suicide. She remembered how a young Wichita girl who worked at the travel plaza she would see every morning before work committed suicide.
Wichita Affiliated Tribes applied for a SAMHSA grant and received it.
“I truly believe that for our tribe that, you know, that was a calling for us to be involved in the SAMHSA grants and to build those programs,” Parton said.
Read more at KOSU.org.
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