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Central Mass Health Care Resource Guide 2018

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Facing the dark side of mental health As suicide rates spike, local mental health organizations struggle to provide enough services to meet demand BY GRANT WELKER Worcester Business Journal News Editor T he bad news came all at once, especially for those working in mental health. In the span of a week in June, TV chef Anthony Bourdain and designer Kate Spade died of suicides, and a Cen- ters for Disease Control and Prevention report brought to light a long and troubling trend: Suicide rates rose by 25 percent from 1999 to 2016, and the jump in Massachusetts was even worse. e report wasn't exactly big news for those who have been working to treat mental illness. "at's pretty consistent with what we've seen organizationally," said Kate Adams, the director of mental health for the Harrington HealthCare System in Southbridge. Yet, as mental health providers in Central Massachusetts have expanded services to deal with this growing need – psychiatry is now the largest department at Harrington Hospital in Southbridge – they bump up against a capacity strained by funding and staffing limits, leaving patients to have to wait for services. "It's really a travesty," said Justin Looser, the executive director for behavioral health at MetroWest Medical Center and Saint Vincent Hospital. "If it were any other diagnosis, we wouldn't stand for it." But mental health service providers are hoping the deaths of Bourdain and Spade have shown even success- ful, wealthy and famous people can struggle with mental health, and depression doesn't spare any group of people. "We haven't done enough to reduce the stigma of seeking mental health services," said Barry Feldman, a psychiatry professor at UMass Medical School. e talk about the need to address the region, state and nation's struggles with opioids have been widespread and led to new government task forces and seminars for health and business professionals, but discussion about mental health and suicide is more subdued, Feldman said, calling the CDC report "a clear indication of what we're doing isn't working." "When suicide comes up, people get really anxious about the topic," Feld- man said. Troubling trends Suicide rates in Massachusetts rose by 35 percent from 1999 to 2016, according to the CDC report. In a silver lining, Massachusetts had the third- lowest national rate in the past three years, with 10 suicides per 100,000 people. With a Massachusetts population of nearly 7 million, that equates to roughly 680 people who have died of suicide in those years. "It's always shocking to see something like that on paper," said Looser. Calls to Samaritans, a nonprofit who helps those with mental illness and their loved ones, saw nearly a doubling in call volume in the weekend aer the CDC report and Spade and Bourdain's suicides, said Steve Mongeau, the Samaritans executive director. Many of those were from people who said they were concerned about a loved one, he said. Samaritans, which holds support groups in Framingham and Worcester, is known for its suicide help line, which it expanded in early 2016 to include text messaging. More than 12,000 text conversations have been recorded since, Mongeau said, including a record high 600 in June. "e silver lining was that the message was getting out that we need to Designer Kate Spade died by suicide on June 5. Chef Anthony Bourdain, here accepting the 2014 Peabody Award for his TV show "Parts Unknown," died by suicide on June 8. PHOTO/PEABODY AWARDS continues on page 6 4 Health Care Resource Guide | 2018-2019

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