Throwing the Dice for $20 million to Reduce Veteran Suicides — A Major VA Gamble
Throwing the Dice for $20 million to Reduce Veteran Suicides — A Major VA Gamble
What do you do when you exhaust your tools and approaches to what has become an intractable problem, and find yourself at an impasse?
If you are the U.S. Dept of Veterans Affairs, which has tried for years to substantially lower the incidence of vet suicides (currently averaging 18 per day), you go bold.
That “bold” constitutes in this case a challenge to the general public, and particularly the veteran advocacy community, to come up with ideas, approaches or inventions that will actually and materially change those statistics for the better — Mission Daybreak.
The premise behind this call to action is part of a 10-year strategy which posits that a comprehensive public health approach is required to address this scourge.
“Suicide has no single cause, and no single strategy can end this complex problem,” their website declares. “That’s why Mission Daybreak is fostering solutions across a broad spectrum of focus areas. A diversity of solutions will only be possible if a diversity of solvers — including veterans, researchers, technologists, advocates, clinicians, health innovators and service members — answer the call to…