is recruiting WMU students for 1.5hr focus groups. Free pizza and $20 raffle! Let us know if you're interested.Mood: excited
Posted at 4:44 PM Jul 7 view more
This is the official profile of the Western Michigan University Suicide Prevention program. This site is not monitored, and counseling will not be provided from this site. If you are thinking about suicide or hurting yourself, or if someone you know is seriously thinking about suicide, please seek help. Monday through Friday from 8-5, call the Western Michigan University Counseling and Testing Center at 269-387-1850. After hours, call (800) 273-TALK (8255). This National Suicide Prevention hotline is available 24 hours per day, 7 days per week and is answered locally. If it is an emergency, call 911.
Western Michigan University's Suicide Prevention Program was made possible through funding from the Garrett Lee Smith Memorial Act (GLSMA). The GLSMA was named in memory of Senator Gordon Smith's (R-OR) son who died by suicide in 2003 to recognize that suicide is a public health problem associated with underlying mental health problems. On October 21, 2004 President Bush signed the nation's first youth suicide prevention bill into law. Western Michigan University's Suicide Prevention Program is a grantee in the GLSMA Campus Suicide Prevention Grant Program, managed by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA), an agency in the Federal Department of Health and Human Services.
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