The Wichita and Affiliated Tribes, a federally recognized Indian Tribe in SW Oklahoma, proposes to assist all the Native people of the Indian Health Services Lawton Service area through the 988 Tribal Response Cooperative for the Crisis Lifeline for three (3) years. At this time, suicide, particularly among young male Natives has reached near epidemic levels. The grant will help provide expanded services through the development of a mobile crisis unit to help supplement early identification of suicide risk and culturally appropriate help to all Natives of any Tribe.
The Lawton Service Area is slightly larger than that of the state of New Jersey and comprises ten counties of over 9,000 square miles. There are approximately 26,000 Native people within the ten-county service area. Seven (7) Tribal Nations have their headquarters within the Lawton Service Area (Apache Tribe of Oklahoma, Caddo, Comanche, Delaware, Kiowa, Wichita and Affiliated and Fort Sill Apache. The Native population has poverty rates greater than Whites in seven of ten counties and many Native people are without health insurance. About 50% of the population is female. Natives in Oklahoma have higher rates of suicide than any race and Native males age 15-34 have approximately four times the rate of suicide as females and almost double the rate of their White male counterparts. The CDC reports that Native suicide of both males and females had greater increases during the first year of Covid 19 compared to all other races. In reality, suicide among our Native people is actually much higher than is reported as studies by the Southern Plains Tribal Health Board have shown that about 30% of Native suicides are unreported, likely due to stigma.
In less than a year, the 988 Crisis Lifeline has had excellent results. Callers to the 988 Crisis Lifeline have much shorter wait times which allows more persons to be served with the addition of a mobile crisis unit. The Wichita and Affiliated will initially expand upon the screening of all Natives within the service areas and workplaces and continue to train teachers and staff on interventions. The project will provide culturally appropriate training to behavioral health professionals throughout the service area. To date, the most widely used interventions include: Asist, safeTALK, and Mental Health First Aid. The grant will also explore innovative ways of calling 988 including on line chats and phone to phone texting. The grant has four broad goals and seventeen measurable Objectives.
Approximately 150 stakeholders per year will receive face to face trainings and over 8,000 Natives each year will be reached through Tribal Newsletters, social media, earned media and radio and TV. Over 350 stakeholders (including 988 personnel) and approximately 15,000 Native will be reached in the two-year project.