Wingman Project
The Wingman Project (formerly 'Wingman For Life') is a layperson, peer-to-peer suicide intervention program that shows U.S. military members and their families how to intervene to save a life. By promoting a Wingman Ethos, whereby military families and members take personal accountability for the well being of each other, communities can help strengthen the bonds that exist between veterans, their families, and ordinary citizens. Funded nationally in the U.S., the Wingman Project is executed state-by-state through a combined effort of chaplains, family support, safety, and other related support functions at local Air National Guard (ANG) units.[1]
About the Wingman Project
The Wingman Project is designed to decrease military suicides through human intervention in crisis events, referral to competent professional authority, public outreach to increase awareness, and de-stigmatization of mental health care.[2]
Originally created as "Wingman For Life" by Air National Guard Lieutenant Colonel Edward Vaughan in 2007,[3] the Wingman Project is a “show, don’t tell” suicide intervention program for military members. In this context, the term intervention is used as a distinct supplement to existing “prevention” programs. A string of suicides among Citizen-Airmen in the summer of 2007[4] created the sense of urgency to do something. At the same time, a public memo from the Chief of Staff of the Air Force (CSAF), Gen T. Michael Moseley, entitled “Wingmen for Life”[5] inspired the name and leadership vector.
After consultation with military chaplains and health care providers, Vaughan adopted the ACE[6] technique for the project as the primary intervention strategy for laypeople. ACE is a military variant of Dr. Paul Quinnett's Question, Persuade, Refer (QPR)[7] methodology. In 2008, Wingman For Life expanded to all 50 U.S. states, three territories and the District of Columbia and officially became the Wingman Project.[8]
In 2009, at the request of the vice commander, Air Force Reserve Command, Vaughan helped launch the Air Force Reserve Wingman Project, which later became the AFRC Wingman Toolkit.[9] In 2010, Vaughan transferred leadership of the Wingman Project to the ANG Director of Safety. In 2012, ANG Safety released a mobile Wingman App to complement the social media campaign of the Wingman Project.[10]
Project goal
The goal of the Wingman Project, and the tools associated therewith, is to teach military members, their friends, colleagues, and loved ones how to intervene to save a life. The life they save may be a fellow military member’s, a veteran’s, a loved one’s, or even their own. Using a straightforward approach known as Ask, Care, Escort (ACE), men and women in uniform will have the tools to intervene during a crisis in order to help a friend or loved one get the professional help needed.[11]
See also
- American Foundation for Suicide Prevention
- National Suicide Prevention Lifeline
- Suicide Prevention Action Network
- United States military veteran suicide epidemic
- Antarctic Wingman Project
- Wingman Day
References and Citations
External links
- Air Force Reserve Wingman Project: AFRC Wingman Toolkit
- ANG Wingman Project: ANG Suicide Intervention
- Disruptive Solutions Process DSP
- See And Avoid: Civil/Military Mid-Air Collision Avoidance
- Lockheed's Skunkworks: Kelly's 14 Rules
- FlyAwake: Pilot Fatigue Mitigation
- Military One Source: MOS
- QPR Institute: QPR
- ASIST: ASIST
- Hangar 30, primary content subcontractor on Wingman Project: H30
- Denver Boulder Video, primary video content producer on Wingman Project: DBV