Jamie Eason's Turkey Muffins & Ab Workout
Four months after the NFL sought to curb wholesale nfl jerseysdomestic
violence in its ranks by launching a crisis hotline, a bolstered mental-health
program and fresh encouragement for troubled players to seek help, that
fortified safety net could not prevent the murder-suicide Saturday involving
Jovan Belcher. The Kansas City Chiefs linebacker, 25, 22, at their
home, then drove to Arrowhead Stadium and killed himself in front of two
coaches and the team's general manager.
After the high-profile suicide of
retired NFLwholesale mlb jerseys superstar
Junior Seau, 43, last May — two years after Seau drove his car off a cliff
following his assault on a girlfriend — NFL commissioner Roger Goodell
installed the 24-hour hotline for players and a reinforced mental-health
initiative on July 26. That same week, following
a spate of NFL-related domestic attacks — at least six other family violence
cases in the NFL have been reported since 2010 — Goodell to discuss
possible solutions.
Yet even as the
league was taking steps to help mentally troubled players and their families,
the Kansas City Chiefs were aware of Belcher's problems, Kansas City
police spokeswoman Sgt. Marisa Barnes told NBC News.
And Police Sgt. Richard Sharp that teamhttp://www.mlbnfljerseyssupply.com officials
"were bending over backwards" to help the couple.
The
Belcher murder-suicide is the type of nightmarish incident the league has
been working harder to prevent, said Robert Gulliver, the NFL’s executive vice
president of human resources/chief diversity officer.
“One of the
biggest things that we are trying to do here (in the NFL) is to change the culture,
where people realize that it’s OK to seek out help for mental health
issues,” Gulliver told NBC News. “We were very deliberate in ...
making the point that mental health is part of total wellness, that it’s OK to
seek out help for mental health issues because that’s part of your overall
well-being."
In addition to
help from the team's counselors, Belcher and his girlfriend Perkins, who was
mother of his 3-month-old daughter and shared his home, would have had access
to the hotline and the league's mental health program.
At the end
of July, the NFL emailed information on its new crisis line and on the league's
available mental-health help to the home of every NFL player, Aiello said,
adding: "The information is sent with the idea that the
player's wife also sees it. If a player's girlfriend sees it, it would be
the same thing."
What's
more, all 32 NFL teams employ a player development director to help
encourage use of the programs, Aiello
said.
In addition, the
NFL Players Association — the labor union for players — staffs its own 24-hour,
toll-free hotline for players to use "if they need any support
whatsoever," said George Atallah, NFLPA spokesman. "If a player has
an alcohol-addiction problem (for example), he calls in and we route that call
to a facility near them, and (facility members) then come pick him up and give
him the assistance he needs. That goes for any depression issues and mental
health issues." The NFLPA also offers counseling services to players, and
it employs a group of retired players "to get a pulse of what’s going
on in the locker rooms, handle situations confidentially, and provide support
when necessary."
As part of what
the NFL calls its “new comprehensive health program” — formally dubbed NFL
Total Wellness — Goodell and the league worked with former U.S. Surgeon General
David Satcher last summer to strengthen its mental health tools and assistance.
The new program encourages players and their families to seek support for
behavioral issues, provides health and safety information and offers
confidential, free advice via telephone and the Internet. That aid is available
to all players and “all members of the NFL family” who find themselves “in
times of need,” the NFL says. The same experts who operate the "NFL Life
Line" run a similar emergency system for members of the U.S. military.
However, even
with best intentions, the NFL remains essentially an elite club in
which players have long been trained to hide physical pain — if not injuries —
to keep their jobs. That environment could keep players from truly
opening up about possible symptoms of depression, anxiety or other
mental-health woes.
Gulliver
declined to say how many players have phoned the hotline and tapped into
the league’s enhanced mental-health program via the web since its launch.
"We don’t
publicize the actual usage or percentage numbers," Gulliver said.

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