The problem with hotlines.
1. They're more often than not mandated reporters (required to call authorities for a suicidal person). If they believe you will end your life (just believe, not that you actually are), police will show up to your door. If you resist, they will fight. So basically it's a "If you don't calm down in ten minutes we'll call the cops" kind of line. Free trauma, will almost make you more suicidal.
2. They're overworked. Too many callers. Some hotlines advise against calling between 23:00-06:00 due to being clogged. You know, please refrain from calling the number you call in case of emergency. In the worst ase scenario, they may call emergency services to deal with you if you're taking too long to calm down because they need to answer the very next call.
3. Too much exposure to suicidal people will either make them numb or empathetic, only reading the mandatory lines in the most monotone voice from their training.
4. There was a short period of time where calls were recorded for quality assurance as well as studying patterns that genuinely suicidal people say versus those in general distress. Most people automatically hung up after hearing "Your call may be recorded". Free privacy breach.
To improve the hotline, a few things needs to be done.
1. Increase the amount of volunteers and lower their hours working. Provide the people working the lines mandatory breaks after a certain number of calls as well as complimentary mental health support for the most traumatic calls. It is mentally draining to handle nothing but suicidal people for hours at a time.
2. Remove the legal mandatory reporting requirements from the hotline and only bring police if the caller explicitly consents. Trace the general county location only should a person be actively looking for resources, but not addreses or other PII. It removes the risk of police in which people would rather CTB than handle them, saving lives.
3. Focus on empathy and reassurance before analyzing the caller's mental state and plan to process the thoughts. This increases trust, honesty, and will eventually deescalate. Most people do not call the hotline and end their life less than a minute in. People want another human to connect with, not a person judging their every word in the name of "safety".