Community Corner
988 National Suicide Prevention Number Takes Effect Soon In Wisconsin
The lifeline's number change comes after Wisconsinites and residents of several other states had to begin using area codes for local calls.
WISCONSIN — The telephone number for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline will be simplified to 988 on Saturday. Preparations for the change to take effect began last year, when Wisconsinites had to start using the area code for all local cellphone calls.
The change was required because the new three-digit suicide prevention hotline number is also a prefix (the second set of three digits of a phone number) in 82 area codes in 35 states and Guam. Previously, the residents of the Badger State were able to make local calls without entering the area code.
Until the switch on Saturday, July 16, Wisconsin residents in crisis should continue to dial or text 800-273-8255. Online chat services are also available. Service members, veterans and their families can reach the Veterans Crisis Line by pressing 1, or by either texting 838255, or online.
All those suicide prevention services will remain operational after the transition, too, according to the Federal Communications Commission.
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Some mental health experts are worried states haven’t adequately prepared for the switch to 988.
Miriam Delphin-Rittmon, an assistant secretary at the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, said at a news conference Thursday she has been working with states on funding to determine their readiness for the 988 switch, USA Today reported.
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Some crisis centers are worried about their ability to staff crisis response centers, and about funding needed for the launch. A report from the agency Delphin-Rittmon heads projects that calls to the suicide hotline will increase by more than half in 2022 with 7.6 million calls, texts or online chats, compared to 3.3 million in 2020.
The Biden administration set aside $432 million for the initial investment in the transition, another $177 million to expand the lifeline infrastructure and almost $105 million in direct grants to states and territories, Delphin-Rittmon said.
Fewer than half of state legislatures have approved bills to fund 988 implementation, according to the National Academy for State Health Policy.
Wisconsin is not among the states that have funded the implementation. No bill or law has been introduced or passed, according to NASHP.
The 988 rollout comes amid escalating suicides and suicide attempts, especially among adolescents and teen girls ages 12-17, during the COVID-19 pandemic, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention research.
Mental health-related emergency room visits by people in that age group increased 31 percent in 2020, compared to 2019, and the trend appears to be continuing, according to CDC research. It showed:
From Feb. 21-March 20, 2021, ER visits for attempted suicides among girls ages 12-17 were 50.6 percent higher than during the same period in 2019. Over the same period, the increase in suicide attempts for boys of the same ages was 3.7 percent.
The trend is alarming because overall, suicide rates are significantly higher among males than females, according to CDC data cited in the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration report on the 988 conversion.
Overall, 866 residents of all ages of Wisconsin died by suicide in 2020, which amounts to 14.5 suicide deaths per 100,000 people according to CDC.
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