Pierce County's Mental Health Crisis: Taking Action
Do you struggle with depression, anxiety, difficulties with thinking or perception, or know someone who does? If you answer yes, you aren’t alone: one in five people will have a diagnosable mental disorder at some point in their lives.
If you or someone you know has problems with mood or thoughts that are impacting daily life, it’s critical to get help now. Don’t wait. Finding treatment and support when serious psychiatric symptoms start can significantly minimize negative impacts on work, school, relationships, and physical health – and the long-term course of mental disorders. Getting help early also reduces the chance of symptoms escalating to a mental crisis, which can result in personal losses, hospitalization, legal consequences, and even suicide.
We face serious mental health challenges in our community and state. Washington State’s suicide rate is 10.5 percent higher than the national average, and Pierce County’s rate is 46.8 percent higher. In 2016, 173 Pierce County residents died by suicide, and the 2016 Healthy Youth Survey showed 11 percent of 10th graders in Pierce County reported suicide attempts, 37 percent reported serious depression symptoms, and 64 percent reported severe anxiety. That same year, Washington was ranked the 47th out of 50 states for its low access to mental health care and high prevalence of mental illness. The national average of psychiatric hospital beds is 26.1 per 100,000 people, but Washington has just 8.3 beds – and Pierce County is even worse with 2.8 beds per 100,000 people. It’s for these reasons that CHI Franciscan is investing in mental health care and partnering to bring an all new behavioral health hospital to Tacoma to meet the urgent need in our community.
Further, these statistics illuminate why it’s so important to seek help for mental health problems, and to reach out and offer help to others. The stigma associated with mental illness can be a barrier, encouraging people to conceal psychiatric symptoms, to deny them to ourselves, and avoid asking others if they need help. Many people lack knowledge about mental disorders and how to obtain treatment and support. At the community level, complex factors like workforce shortages, lack of a coordinated system of care, and insufficient funding cause gaps in available mental health services.
Is there anything we can do? Yes! Every one of us can learn the signs and symptoms of mental disorders, resist stigma, be ready to offer help to people in mental crisis, and know exactly how to find help. As part of its community-based approach to reduce mental crises in Pierce County, CHI Franciscan Health facilitates free Mental Health First Aid training, an eight-hour, evidence-based course that teaches the warning signs of depression, bipolar disorder, anxiety, substance use disorders, and schizophrenia. It also teaches participants how to offer initial help in a crisis and connect people to appropriate care.
In addition, everyone in Pierce and King County should know how to find mental health treatment, support, and crisis services:
• Dial 2-1-1
for one-on-one help finding local mental health treatment and support services.
• Pierce County Crisis Line –1-800-576-7764
and King County Crisis Line –1-866-427-4747
:
24/7 help for anyone experiencing a mental crisis, or who is concerned about someone else. Calls are answered by mental health professionals who coordinate with emergency services in life-threatening situations.
• Crisis Text Line – text “HEAL” to 741741
: Free 24/7 support for people in crisis, staffed by trained crisis counselors.
Mental Health First Aid and safeTALK, a four-hour suicide prevention training, are currently available to Pierce residents at no cost, provided by CHI Franciscan Health’s Prevent-Avert-Respond Initiative and community partners. Contact monetcraton@chifranciscan.org for the 2018 training schedule.
Take action today – put the numbers for mental health services in your phone, register for Mental Health First Aid or safeTALK training, ask if a friend needs help. All of us need to be part of the solution to our community’s mental health challenges. By equipping ourselves with mental health knowledge and tools to help, we will make a difference, and even save lives.
Monet Craton is the Director of CHI Franciscan Health’s Prevent-Avert-Respond (PAR) Initiative, a community-based approach to reduce mental crises in Pierce County. In collaboration with local and state partners, the initiative aims to build individuals’, professionals’, and organizations’ ability to identify and respond to mental health problems before they reach crisis; encourage and expedite help-seeking; and facilitate excellent assistance to persons in crisis.






