Ending the "Cowboy-Up" Culture: Addressing Mental Health Issues in American West
The national 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline number was launched to replace the cumbersome ten digit number. Those working to end suicide hope the simplified number will encourage more people to reach out, but a recent study shows that fewer than half Americans know about it. Teresa Krug visited with advocates in Montana — part of the "Suicide Belt" — who are answering the calls and hoping greater awareness will lead to fewer deaths.
Видео Ending the "Cowboy-Up" Culture: Addressing Mental Health Issues in American West канала Matter of Fact
Видео Ending the "Cowboy-Up" Culture: Addressing Mental Health Issues in American West канала Matter of Fact
Показать
Комментарии отсутствуют
Информация о видео
Другие видео канала
Filling in the Skills Gap A New Way of Training Workers to Match the JobsMilwaukee Non Profit Competes with Private Equity Firms for PropertiesThe Fight to Keep Nebraska’s Electoral College Votes SplitD C Activists Explain the Power of Street Art in Their Own WordsCivil rights scholar says America ‘at a moment of reckoning in so many areas’Coming Soon: Promises of ChangeIlyasah Shabazz shares that her father, Malcolm X, said this generation would demand changeWhen the Term “Asian” is Simply One Identity'The progress is just going to keep going': John Legend talks criminal justice reform, voting rights“Revelations” How Two North Carolina Pastors Are Searching for Racial ReconciliationAugust 14, 2021Afghan Female Students Excel in the U SHow A Ban on Drums Inspired Hundreds of Years of MusicGeorgians Prepare to Vote Amidst Many Elections Process ChangesShould We Be Concerned about 5G?Latino and Hispanic Focused Film Production Company Takes Foothold in GeorgiaIn the Viewfinder: Vaccinating AmericaCould Exercise Delay Onset of Alzheimer’s?A Septuagenarian Explorer Who's Been to 50 Countries Inspires New GenerationNew Iowa Labor Law Puts Some Minors More at Risk of Exploitation