t: 0800 58 58 58 5pm - midnight every day or webchat at Text: 85258ĬALM Campaign Against Living Miserably: For men who are down or who need to talk, find information and support. It’s a place to go if you’re struggling to cope and you need immediate help.
MAN JUMPS FROM BRIDGE 2021 FREE
Shout: 24/7 text service, free on all major mobile networks, for anyone in crisis anytime, anywhere. Whatever your worry, whenever you need help, anytime. Ĭhildline: Free, private and confidential service for anyone under 19 where you can talk about anything. ‘We are with you’ for support with alcohol, drugs or mental health call 01872 263001 or visit. Man Down: supporting men's mental health in Cornwall. This is also an NHS funded service, but for adults 18+ who have been bereaved by suicide. The Suicide Liaison Service is also available via this number. t: 116 123 24 hours a day e: South West offer online support and NHS talking therapies – call 01208 871905 for people aged 16+ years. Samaritans: Emotional support to anyone in emotional distress, struggling to cope, or at risk of suicide. The team behind the 24/7 open access telephone response line will listen to you and determine how best to help.
Call free any time, day or night if you are worried about your own or someone else’s mental health. Mental Health and Suicide Prevention SignpostingĢ4/7 NHS Mental health response line: For support and advice. Supt Costin explained that despite having little information to go on, the pair of officers reasoned it was likely that he would head towards the area of the Tamar Bridge and so they headed directly there. Those assembled during the online ceremony heard how the two officers had been deployed to an incident where a man had left work early due to a mental health crisis. Read next: Four arrested after two shotguns and ammo seized in police raids across Plymouth
MAN JUMPS FROM BRIDGE 2021 PC
The online gathering of police and members of the public at the Commanders Awards ceremony heard Supt Louise Costin recount a number of remarkable incidents of bravery, determination and public spiritedness during lockdown which were deemed worthy of recognition.Īmong them were PC Daniel Timmins and a female police constable who were awarded a Chief Commander's Certificate for their remarkable actions on the evening of April 19 this year.
Two police officers who grabbed ahold of a man as he jumped from the Tamar Bridge and held him despite him trying to fight them off, have been hailed at an awards ceremony.