Program targets veteran suicides
Fledgling prevention effort relies on shared experience
By Anna Badkhen
Globe Staff / March 31, 2008
He knew exactly what it was like, Kevin Lambert told the Iraq war veteran at a Dunkin' Donuts shop north of Boston: the insomnia, the bouts of depression, the hyper-vigilance that makes you imagine roadside bombs hidden in street garbage. Like the veteran, Lambert was 24, had served in Iraq, and had been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder.
"I know how you feel," Lambert said. He listened attentively to the veteran's story before telling him where he could find counseling.
With suicide rates on the rise among military personnel, Massachusetts last month launched a one-of-a-kind program to prevent suicide among veterans of wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The program's seven members -a woman whose husband has served in Afghanistan, five young combat veterans, including Lambert, and a mental health expert - say their personal experience helps them reach out to veterans who are considering suicide or who simply need help navigating the complicated and often confusing system of veterans' benefits and services.
"Being in combat and then trying to readjust to the civilian life - it's not easy. No one understands that because they haven't been there," said Lambert, who was deployed with the Army to Mosul and Baghdad in 2005 and 2006. "But we've been there. We can relate."
Members of the program, which is run by the Department of Veterans Services, funded by the Department of Public Health, and known by its acronym, SAVE, hope that their approach will help veterans overcome the sense of alienation and frustration that, combined with mental trauma incurred during combat, can lead to suicide. They meet with veterans, take them out for meals, refer them to counselors and job fairs, escort them to agencies that provide services and benefits to veterans, and explain to their relatives why veterans often appear depressed or restless.
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