Tidesphere

joined 1 year ago
[–] Tidesphere 3 points 7 months ago

It's definitely true that my training, experience and employment gives me a lot more resources. I definitely encourage people to help others call us, rather than 911, when they're able.

[–] Tidesphere 6 points 8 months ago

The group that handles 988, the suicide line, is called Vibrant and they're working with 911 dispatchers all over the country to train them to transfer over to 988 if there's any situation like that instead of handling it themselves.

[–] Tidesphere 7 points 8 months ago

Yeah, unfortunately not all call centers have the same policies. I can only speak for mine.

[–] Tidesphere 2 points 8 months ago (1 children)

In some places, but not all, 911 will dispatch them and usually these crisis teams are required to bring at least one officer with them.

[–] Tidesphere 14 points 8 months ago (1 children)

Also mental health practitioner here. The confused looks my family gives when they ask how to solve the mental health crisis. And I say worker's rights, better pay, affordable housing, single payer health care, measures against online radicalization, etc

[–] Tidesphere 4 points 8 months ago (3 children)

A good tip, many counties have what's called a mobile crisis unit. It's like an ambulance of mental health workers that come to your home and don't take you anywhere. Usually calling 988 you can ask them to help you find yours if you can't find it.

[–] Tidesphere 47 points 8 months ago (19 children)

I work for a mental health crisis line. We are taught, with extremity, to always go for least intrusive intervention possible. We will only ever call Emergency Services after a literal check list to ensure it's the last resort possible.

Practically the only times we ever call EMS on someone is if they tell us they are actively dying this very second, due to injury or overdose, etc. Or if they, after all of our attempts to listen, empathize, talk about what's going on, talk about how they're feeling tonight, work on what options there might be, who in their lives might be able to help, listing resources, and attempting to safety plan; if after all that, they say "yeah, I'm gonna kill myself specifically in this fashion and I'm gonna do it right now, and I have the means available to me." Then hang up and don't answer when we call back. Then we call EMS.

It's drilled into us that EMS is expensive for the person, and potentially dangerous because police are often not great at responding to Mental Health emergencies. So always the last last last resort.

[–] Tidesphere 26 points 8 months ago

One thing that I've found is super consistent across all Trumpers that I've ever spoken to.

They have no fucking clue what tariffs are.

[–] Tidesphere 1 points 8 months ago

My partner is in an apprenticeship program for electrical and plumbing. We're in a city so large, with so many tradespeople, that a given field has multiple unions within the same metro area. What you're describing is not at all anyone's experience in this area of the U.S.

[–] Tidesphere 1 points 8 months ago

Must be a state by state thing. My partner recently moved to trades from another career, and it's correct that you get put on a list of apprenticeship positions, but they employ you to actively do work the entire time.

[–] Tidesphere 2 points 11 months ago

Yeah, they've been doing this for years, we already know this haha

view more: ‹ prev next ›