[From article]
Ted Koran says the only reason he’s still alive today is because of the 60 rescue animals he cares for, WFTS-TV reports. The Air Force veteran first reached out to the James Haley VA Center in Tampa, where a recording told him the 800 number for the suicide hotline. He says was initially put on hold for 10 minutes, before hanging up and redialing the number two more times.
“I went to the only place that I knew and that I had available to me, the VA,” Koran told WFTS. “I had to sit there patiently, in emotional distress, in tears, wanting to give up, desperately needing someone to talk to.”
“I was missing my wife,” he said.
The Veterans Crisis Hotline was first established by the VA in 2007, at which point it averaged 60 calls a day on four phone lines with personnel. However today, 52 operators field more than 1,000 calls each day, and say they can’t keep up with growing calls for help from veterans. A Scripps investigation recently uncovered that calls to the veterans’ hotline often overload the system, forcing the veterans to be put on hold as calls are rerouted to other call centers.
One veteran showed WFTS a recording in which he was put on hold for 36 minutes.
Air Force Vet Says Veterans Suicide Hotline Placed Him On Hold Repeatedly
CBS New Tampa FL
April 14, 2015 9:19 AM
1 comment:
I have noticed some VA clinics have a recording tellin veterans ... if you are feeling suicidal or homicidal, please hang up, and call xxx-xxx-xxxx
Does anyone think it's smart to tell a suicidal or homicidal veteran to "hang up, and call xxx-xxx-xxxx"?
Find me a #$^%#$&&%$^* piece of paper and pen ...
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