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NEWS • MEDIA

Global Health Equity Foundation will host a forum in London, England on April 24, 2012. The forum focuses on New Methodology - Analysing Health Equity Gaps.

 

Watch video highlights from a Consensus Building Forum.

 

Suicide Prevention Newsletter, Issue #1

Suicide Prevention Newsletter, Issue #2


More information.

Global Health Equity Foundation (GHEF) is a non-profit organization seeking to address challenges faced by healthcare providers. The Foundation serves as a catalyst for community awareness, communication, and involvement. In September of 2011, GHEF sponsored filmmaker Lise Swenson as she recorded and produced a film dramatizing the issues surrounding suicide. GHEF sponsored the film and other community-awareness events as part of a Community Based Media Project (CBMP) with a focus on suicide prevention. In October, 2011, CBMP leaders scheduled follow-up events and meetings to continue to build the awareness and prevention program.

September 8, 2011 Press release.
Coverage in Billings Gazette 9/20/2011

 

PRESS RELEASE: September 8, 2011

Local and International Foundations Support Suicide Awareness Campaign in Miles City

Contacts: Kasey Stanton , Research Intern, 406.853.4842 • Global Health Equity Foundation, 406.951.2080

 

In a community ravaged by suicide, individual efforts have been made to address the issue and instigate lasting positive change. Despite these efforts, suicide has remained prevalent in Miles City and eastern Montana, and has resulted in the loss of lives even within the last month. A unified and collaborative approach may be necessary to end the crisis of suicide in our community.


Global Health Equity Foundation plans to merge previous efforts into a single, interactive approach. Attacking the problem head on will truly make a significant impact in eastern Montana. Global Health Equity Foundation is a non-profit organization seeking to address challenges faced by health and mental health care providers in rural areas. The Foundation serves as a catalyst for community awareness, communication, and involvement. Already, several community forums have been held to facilitate discussion. GHEF is sponsoring a documentary film as part of a Community Media Based Project with a focus on suicide.


While there have been groups and individuals, such as the Local Advisory Committee and Holy Rosary Healthcare, who have sought to increase suicide awareness, the issue has been covered up or ignored by many others. For a significant impact to be made, involvement in suicide prevention and awareness of warning signs, and of what those struggling with mental illness may be facing needs to be nurtured in our community. Having community leaders interested and active is a great start, but it is the community as a whole who must act if the issue is to be resolved. GHEF will continue to hold community forums, and will provide print publications to present the objectives of the Foundation and information on suicide in order to spur community awareness and involvement.


Suicide is a grave concern in Eastern Montana. According to the Montana Department of Health and Human Services, suicide ranked as the second-leading cause of death for three age groups, ranging from 10-34 years old. In Miles City alone, there have been many unfortunate incidences of people taking their own lives. Although suicide among adolescents and young adults may be the most commonly recognized and publicized, the elderly have the highest rate of suicide nationally, and suicide remained as the third-leading cause of death for those 35-44, and suicide ranks fourth for people aged 45-54.


Suicide is harmful not only to individuals, but clearly to families, friends, and communities. Ken Holmlund, who lost his son Kevin to suicide, is among many eastern Montanans who have lost a family member to suicide. Holmlund’s son Kevin committed suicide when he was 17 years old, and Holmlund now uses his ability as an orator to share his story, although he admits the topic is never an easy one to present. Kevin was a talented young man involved in Key Club and Speech and Drama. He was a math whiz who had been accepted to study engineering and robotics at Purdue University. Holmlund described his son as a “good kid who made a serious mistake.” While Holmlund knows firsthand that losing a child is incredibly difficult, he also suggested putting an emphasis on siblings and other family members left behind, “who may feel alone and need just as much help as parents.”


When asked how authorities in Miles City and the surrounding area can best meet the needs of families after a suicide crisis, Holmlund advised training public officials and workers who respond to such cases. A long-time friend who was serving as police officer for the Miles City task force informed Holmlund about Kevin’s suicide.


“It is devastating to tell someone their child is gone, and there needs to be more emphasis on training people in these roles,” said Holmlund. “Nobody has the right words to say, but being there to listen without passing judgment is critical.”


On being questioned about the best way to diminish the occurrence of suicide in eastern Montana, Holmlund advises reaching kids at a young age to educate them on the severity and permanence of suicide. Suicide has occurred even among middle school students in Miles City. Middle school can be a difficult age where a great deal of change may occur as new relationships form and adolescents seek an identity for themselves. Holmlund also feels bullying and a lack of activities for youth only exacerbate the problem. A youth center or outlet for kids would be especially beneficial.


In eastern Montana stigma against mental illness makes combating suicide even more challenging. It is easy to overlook the symptoms and severity of mental illness, and many people disregard it entirely. Holmlund said his personal views on mental illness have evolved through all of his experiences, and he realizes how drastically mental illness can distress people

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“In most cases people are not feigning mental illness,” said Holmlund, “It is really serious, and it really does affect people.”


Holmlund believes his son Kevin may have had some chemical imbalance that contributed to his state, and, after losing his son he faced a bout of depression.


“Don’t ignore it,” Holmlund urges, “It won’t get better by itself.”


Unfortunately, Kevin and Ken Holmlund’s story is only one of many in eastern Montana. To truly make an impact in reducing suicide, not just for teens but for Montanans of all ages, unity and the dissemination of knowledge are necessary. Action and involvement is needed, and Holmlund urges remembering those who have been lost to suicide. Recently at a class reunion, Kevin’s former classmates conducted a remembrance in honor of Kevin and visited the family.


Alongside the work being conducted by Global Health Equity Foundation, an Out of the Darkness Walk, sponsored by the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, will be held on September 11, 2011. Ken Holmlund will speak at this event, giving a full account of his family’s story.


Direct any questions about Global Health Equity Foundation and its objectives to connect@ghef.org. Feel free to stop by the GHEF office in the US Bank Building at 615 Main in Miles City.

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Star MastheadCommunity film project to focus on teen suicide


By AMANDA BREITBACH RAGSDALE, Star Staff Writer (reprinted with permission from the Miles City Star newspaper)


"This is really a pit that you need help climbing out of," said Heather Schmidt, associate producer of a community-based film project aimed at preventing teen suicide and treating depression.


Filmmaker and social activist Lise Swenson presented the idea Tuesday night to a group of health professionals, people who have been touched personally by teen suicide and depression and others interested in working on the project. The idea to create a community film project addressing suicide was born from a presentation Swenson did in Miles City back in March, she explained. Invited by the Global Health Equity Foundation to film the Eastern Montana Rural Health Care Conference, held in Miles City on March 4, she was asked to do a presentation on her work in community-based media. Attendees immediately saw the potential to use the use that kind of approach in addressing teen suicide, which has been a persistent and serious problem in Miles City. "I've never had such an overwhelming response from a community to an idea," she said.


The project will be a community effort, Swenson said. Locals will be sought to contribute their personal experiences and stories, as well as filmmaking, sound, editing and acting skills. Swenson will serve as lead media expert, with locals Molly Wendland as lead community expert and Schmidt as associate producer. Anyone with an interest in being involved or a story or skill to contribute is invited to become involved as the project takes shape. Confidentiality and personal comfort will be respected in all interviews.


Although the filmmakers will be working from real stories and experiences, the resulting film will not be a documentary or a reenactment, Swenson emphasized. Those stories will be compiled and recorded as inspiration, and from them a fictional script will be written.

There are several reasons for using fiction to tell the story. First, it will appeal to a broader audience – especially affected teens. "Kids don't generally want to watch a documentary," said Swenson. Also, creating a fictional story gives people more freedom to tell their stories. "Fiction can often get closer to the truth," she said.


Swenson shared some examples of her previous work in community-based film projects, including work she did with Latino youth and students at "continuation" high schools – alternative schools for at-risk students – in California. She also shared ways the project could become more than a film – through interactive art displays, use of the Internet and educational distribution.


Members of the audience suggested areas and populations the film could focus on, emphasizing the need to include the American Indian community and students at the high school and middle school.


The project is being spearheaded by the Global Health Equity Foundation, a nonprofit organization aimed at improving global health equity through research, advocacy and capacity building. Other partners have expressed interest in becoming involved, Swenson said, and more partners will be sought as the effort gets under way.


To become involved in the project or to share a story or experience, contact Molly Wendland at (406)951-2080 or molly.wendland@almyracommunications.com or Heather Schmidt at (406)480-2223 or hschmidt87@hotmail.com.

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MORE NEWS & MEDIA

March 4, 2011 - Global Health Equity Foundation Hosts its 1st Live Consensus Building Forum in Miles City, Montana USA
Watch video highlights from the Consensus Building Forum.

June 2, 2011 - Global Health Equity Foundation Hosts its 2nd Consensus Building Forum in Miles City

The forum brought together a diverse group: city leaders, nurses, hospital CEOs, physicians, business owners, and other community leaders from across eastern Montana. The sheer excitement of these participants was impressive. People met and discussed what the real issues were and how to potentially solve them. They set priorities, and decided where best to begin. It worked because we involved all the key stakeholders. We moved the envelope as to when things could get done. — Jackie Muri, Director Business Development, Strategy & Foundation, Holy Rosary Healthcare

 

May 17, 2010 - Global Health Equity Foundation To Host Global Health Leaders at its 1st International Symposium in Geneva, Switzerland

 

 

Global Health Equity Foundation engages in three core strategies - Research, Advocacy and Capacity Building. Read more.

 

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