Suicide Prevention & Response Network — Veterans Collaborative

Suicide Prevention & Response


Network Directory

Joy Mirrione and Michelle Glaser are the Co-Chairs of the Suicide Prevention & Response Network. Get in touch if you’re interested in organizing a summit or joining efforts to prevent suicide and support the resilience of service members, veterans, and their families and caregivers.


Crisis & Help Lines in Massachusetts

Start a chat here.

The 988 Suicide & Crisis Line #BeThe1To campaign offers five evidence-based steps anyone can take. The Veterans Crisis Line offers free & confidential support any time. If you are a veteran in crisis or are concerned about one, Dial 988 then Press 1.

The Massachusetts Behavioral Health Help Line (BHHL) is a clinical hotline staffed by trained providers and peer coaches offering clinical assessment, treatment referrals, and crisis triage. Call or text (833) 733-2445 or chat here.


Massachusetts SAVE Team

Statewide Advocacy for Veterans’ Empowerment (SAVE) is an outreach program of the Massachusetts Executive Office of Veterans Services (EOVS) connecting veterans with peers to help them access the right benefits and services to support their overall mental health.

The SAVE program’s primary mission is to prevent suicide and mental health distress by identifying issues veterans encounter when returning from service and proactively providing access to benefits and services. This support helps veterans transition positively back to civilian life.

The SAVE team works closely and in collaboration with the Massachusetts National Guard. The Massachusetts National Guard’s resources and Family Readiness Program are available to all service members and their families, regardless of the branch in which they serve.


Suicide Prevention Resources

The VA is joining up with community-based suicide prevention initiatives to reach veterans where they live and connect, supporting a public health approach to suicide prevention. Check out Working Together Toward Preventing Suicide to learn more.

If you have a passion to improve the lives of veterans in your community, or if you’d like to partner in efforts to prevent suicide, you can reach out to your area’s VA Office of Mental Health & Suicide Prevention Community Engagement & Partnership Coordinator (CEPC) listed below.

Suicide Prevention Strategies for Communities

The U.S. Center for Disease Control’s Suicide Prevention Strategies for Communities support the implementation of a public health approach that uses data to drive decision-making; implements and evaluates multiple prevention strategies to enhance resilience and improve well-being based on the best available evidence; and works to prevent people from becoming suicidal

Look for snapshots of the strategies throughout our website that align with the work of service providers and programs within networks focused on mitigating risk factors and enhancing protective factors among service members, veterans, and their families, caregivers, and survivors (ie, “suicide protection”). Visit the CDC’s website for more about risk factors and warning signs.

Warning Signs

Watch for warning signs like talking about being a burden; expressing hopelessness; isolation; increasing anxiety, anger, rage, or substance use; extreme mood swings; sleeping too much or not enough; talking about wanting to die, feeling trapped, or being in unbearable pain; seeking access to lethal means; or making plans for suicide.

Risk Factors

Individual risk factors include having a previous suicide attempt; a history of depression, other mental illnesses, adverse childhood experiences, or violence victimization and/or perpetration; a serious illness, such as chronic pain; substance use; criminal, legal, or job/financial problems or loss; impulsive or aggressive tendencies; or a sense of hopelessness.

The CDC has provided $650,000 annually to Massachusetts to support suicide prevention efforts since FY20. The focus of Massachusetts Department of Public Health is on youth and young adults, men between age 25–64 years old and in certain occupations, Hispanic/Latinx men, and military and veterans. CDC-funded suicide prevention efforts in Massachusetts have included:

  • identifying and supporting veterans at risk by requiring all staff working in MassHire Career Centers to complete Question, Persuade, Refer (QPR) gatekeeper training; and

  • promoting connectedness among veterans by developing a marketing campaign to increase the diversity, inclusion, and representation of veterans on MassMen in order to reach men of color and gender and sexual minorities.


Massachusetts Veteran Suicide Data

According to VA’s 2023 National Veterans Suicide Report, veteran suicide rates increased overall by 6.3% among men and 24.1% among women from 2020 to 2021. Suicide rates are consistently higher among veterans than nonveterans and have risen faster among veterans than civilians since 2005.

From 2019 to 2021, VA Behavioral Health Autopsy Program data for VA users who died by suicide and were reported to VHA Suicide Prevention teams showed the top three risk factors were:

  • pain (55.9%);

  • sleep problems (51.7%); and 

  • increased health problems (40.7%).

From 2020 to 2021, the national veteran suicide rate increased from 31.7 to 33.9 per 100,000, compared to an increase in the veteran suicide rate in Massachusetts from 18.5 to 19.1 per 100,000. The total suicide rate in Massachusetts decreased during this period from 10.8 to 10.4 per 100,000.

Massachusetts Violent Death Reporting System

The Massachusetts Injury Surveillance Program publishes data on suicide deaths within the state. Military and Veterans Suicide data sheets were published from 2017 to 2020. There were 68 suicides in 2020, compared to 63 in 2017. (The data from the VA above does not include service members).

Although the suicide rate among veterans is substantially lower in Massachusetts compared to the national rate, at least one veteran died by suicide each week on average in Massachusetts –– with two to three more dying by overdose –– leaving behind countless family members, partners, friends, colleagues, and comrades to grapple with loss, grief, and guilt related to their death.


Evidence-Based Suicide Prevention Strategies

VA developed a resource to explore the various VA/DoD Clinical Practice Guidelines for Suicide Prevention recommendations with the aim of putting them into practice.

RAND’s 2021 Suicide Among Veterans: Veterans Issues in Focus showed REACH VET and Caring Contacts initiatives to reach out to others with non-demanding expressions of care and concern work as intended; and evidence is emerging supporting community-based initiatives and the use of Screening & Suicide Risk Assessments.

Lethal Means Safety is also vital to mitigate risks. Although veterans have generally been more likely to use firearms than civilians, use of firearms by women in general who die by suicide surpassed other means in 2020. Based on the 2023 National VA Suicide Prevention Report, the firearm suicide rate in 2021 was:

  • 281.1 percent higher for veteran women compared to non-veteran women; and

  • 62.4 percent higher for veteran men compared to non-veteran men.

In June 2024, VA Boston researchers evaluated the experience of all veterans separating from active duty between July 2014 and September 2017 who were enrolled in VA and had a diagnosis of PTSD, depression, or substance use disorder in the year before they separated from the military Higher staffing levels at VA facilities led to faster initiation of care at VA for this high risk cohort.

RAND published A Summary of Veteran-Related Statistics in 2023 drawing from nationally representative data sets finding that around 6.9 percent of veterans experienced serious psychological distress in the past year.

  • Distress was significantly more prevalent among veterans who were bisexual (24 percent), ages 18 to 34 (19 percent), women (18.1 percent), or gay/lesbian (15.5 percent).

  • Veterans under age 65 were more likely than nonveterans to get mental health treatment.

  • Veterans of all ages were more likely than nonveterans to get alcohol/substance use treatment.

In September 2022, VA researchers found that mental health staffing levels at VA facilities affect the probability of suicide-related events among their patients. VA HSR&D issued a Publication Brief, which is done for important findings.

“Obtaining prompt access to services is critical not only during times of crisis,” the 2023 National VA Suicide Prevention Report notes, “but when first initiating treatment, and in a sustained manner to complete a full episode of care.”

Suicide risk is generally higher in trauma survivors, especially those who struggle expressing emotions.

Research in veterans with PTSD suggests the strongest link to suicidal ideation and attempts involves guilt related to combat and actions taken during war. Experiencing Military Sexual Trauma (MST) is also an independent risk factor for suicide and substance use disorder in veterans.

The VA’s annual Survey of Veteran Enrollees’ Health from 2021 indicated that 45 percent of VA-enrolled veterans in the VA New England Healthcare System (VISN 1) were under age 65; these veterans are more diverse and affluent and “experience healthcare differently” compared to VA-enrolled veterans over age 65, who are less likely to have combat status.

  • Vietnam Era – 36.2 percent of enrolled veterans  (around half with combat service)

  • Gulf War Era – 26.2 percent of enrolled veterans (over 62 percent with combat service)

  • Post-2001 Era – 30.4 percent of enrolled veterans (nearly 73 percent with combat service)

  • OIF/OEF/OND – 68 percent of Post-2001 Era (nearly 94 percent with combat service)

Veterans using VA care only reported poorer health. Veterans under age 45 were most likely lack other healthcare options (38.1 percent), report better experiences at non-VA facilities, and not report trusting VA (28 percent). OIF/OEF/OND enrolled in VA care were age 42 on average.

In 2016, researchers demonstrated that veterans who deployed during OIF/OEF and reported combat exposure had an increased risk for MST compared to those without combat exposure. MST risk was similar for women whether or not they deployed; men who deployed had lower MST risk.


Military Suicide Prevention & Response

The DoD’s Suicide Prevention & Response Independent Review Committee (SPRIRC) also pointed to the need to address the logical downstream effects of implementation, citing DoD’s experience with increasing screening––leading to more referrals for services––without an accompanying increase in behavioral health providers to act on them.

The SPRIRC reviewed many recommendations that have historically been made through DoD efforts, concluding the persistence of elevated suicide rates in the military results “in no small part [from] the DoD’s limited responsiveness to multiple recommendations that have been repeatedly raised by independent reviewers and its own experts.”

The SPRIRC framed the problem of suicide in the military as a wicked problem, noting it is “especially difficult and elusive to solve because [it involves] complex interdependencies.” SPRIRC had “little reason” to expect suicides to drop if the existing recommendations aren’t implemented; they recommended returning to these recommendations if suicide rates increase or fail to decrease.

On November 14, 2024, the DoD released its annual report on suicide among service members and their dependents. An additional 523 service members died by suicide in CY 2023, compared to 493 service members in CY 2022, with the overall suicide rate increasing by 12 percent. Firearms were involved in 65 percent of the deaths.


Risks Associated with Medication & Substance Use

In 2021, Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America surveyed 5,174 veterans, asking how their service-connected injuries were being treated as part of their Annual Survey. The survey found that 75 percent were taking antidepressants ( 75 percent took them previously); 51 percent were taking anti-anxiety medications (59 percent took them previously); 40 percent were taking sleep pills (58 percent took them previously); 13 percent were taking opioids (46 percent took them previously); and 65 percent used alternative therapies, including 32 percent trying a chiropractor or meditation, 22 percent trying yoga, and 21 percent trying acupuncture or cannabis.



Operation Deep Dive

America’s Warrior Partnership’s Operation Deep Dive™ study currently encompasses five years of death data corroborated by the DoD from Massachusetts and seven other states. 

OpDD™ acquired state-wide death records for Massachusetts in 2020, which were prepared and delivered to the DoD for Phase I verification. Massachusetts was the first state to provide death certificate data in 2022. Based on the 2023 Annual Report, Massachusetts death certificate data was prepared and sent to DoD to be linked to military records in October 2023.

Sociocultural Death Investigation interviews are ongoing. AWP is seeking relatives, loved ones, friends, and co-workers of former service members who died by suicide or self-injury, including death by overdose, asphyxiation, accidental gunshot, drowning, suicide by law enforcement, or high-speed, single-driver accidents, within the past 24 months.


Veterans Collaborative Suicide Prevention Summits

Key Topics

  • Developing shared resource trackers and listings focused on suicide awareness, prevention, postvention, and survivors

  • Supporting the development of a coordinated care network to facilitate efficient referrals and warm handoffs to prevent crises

  • Proactively identifying veterans in need of services to support their overall health and wellbeing alongside benefits and care

  • Leveraging opportunities for collaboration and community-building

  • Breaking down institutional barriers and silos to ensure the military and veteran community has access to services and support

  • Increasing the number of veterans enrolled in and using VA Medical Centers, Vet Centers, Home Base, Forge VFR, and other available health, mental health, and substance use related medical care treatment options

  • Maintaining awareness of relevant trends and data in Massachusetts

  • Maintaining a current listing of upcoming trainings, support groups, and events focused on suicide protection on our shared outreach calendar (#suicide)

  • Helping others recognize and identify early warning signs, address risk factors, enhance protective factors, and use available services and resources

  • Advocating for the referral of service members, veterans, and family members to services and programs that may help mitigate identified risk factors and/or enhance protective factors

Veterans Harm Reduction Summit

The Veterans Collaborative and Grunt Style Foundation hosted the first Massachusetts Veterans Harm Reduction Summit on December 11th in collaboration with VFW Department of Massachusetts, Mad in America, HeartCore Collective, Irreverent Warriors and 22Mohawks at Boston Police VFW Post 1018, learning from experts alongside impacted veterans and survivors exploring safe prescribing and deprescribing and reviewing the available public health data involving military and veteran suicide and overdose deaths in Massachusetts and beyond. Check out HARMREDUCTION.vet to learn more.