Three years in, is the Pillars for Life suicide prevention strategy doing any good?
For once, it’s a subject Saskatchewan would not want to be leading the pack in – suicide rates – but the province has consistently been either at the top or among the top for suicide rates among the provinces in the last several years.
This month is the three-year anniversary of Pillars for Life, a suicide prevention plan touted by the Saskatchewan Party government but criticized by some others. But three years in, is it working?
Rebecca Rackow said that’s a hard thing to determine because it got such a slow start.
“So it’s hard to say if we’re on task to make some very strong changes and move in the right direction or how effective this will be. As time goes on, it’s hard to say,” she said.
She couldn’t say whether the slow start was due to the COVID-19 pandemic or just how long it can take to realize an idea.