A quiet crisis

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‘A quiet crisis’ By Bill Buley The Garden Island | Tuesday, March 26, 2019, 12:05 a.m.

LIHUE — When Marion Paul learned that 9 percent of high school students on Kauai tried to commit suicide last year, she couldn’t believe it. In fact, she double-checked to be sure it was accurate. When she found it was, she was alarmed — and she knew something had to be done. “It was such an appalling number,” said Paul, president and CEO of Kauai Planning & Action Alliance. “People are beginning to see it’s an epidemic,” she added. “We need to do something.” They did. An action committee was created under Keiki to Career Kauai, an initiative of KPAA, with initial funding provided by Hawaii Community Foundation. It consisted of representatives from education to health, social services, and the faith community. Their goal, to find out why teens were losing hope, why so many were attempting suicide. One aspect of their task was talking to teens. What were they seeing, feeling and thinking? “And that opened the floodgates,” Paul said. More than a half a year later, the “Kauai Resilience Project” was born to provide solutions for the community and hope for teens. “Our goals are very simple,” she said. “It’s to build resilience.” Councilmember Mason Chock is chair of the Kauai Resilience Project. “In the coming months, we will be planting positive seeds so that our youth and adult education campaigns will begin to resonate and take on a life of their own in the realms of social media, face-to-face interactions, family relationships, and day-to-day living,” said Chock. “In a few years, we envision a healthier and happier, more resilient Kauai.”


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