JOHNSTON, Iowa (August 9, 2022) — Join Iowa PBS on September 6, 6PM, for Facing Suicide in Iowa — a hopeful, forward-facing initiative designed to educate and inform adults on the warning signs of suicide in teens and young adults, as well as discuss the many different ways to create safe spaces for the young people in our lives to be open about their mental health.

This in-person and online premiere and discussion will open the conversation for caregivers, parents, educators, health-care workers, law-enforcement officers, and everybody in between. Attendees will preview local and national content with a follow-up discussion and Q&A with experts in suicide prevention. Questions for the local experts will be solicited from the audience ahead of the event as well as live.

Iowa PBS will premiere locally-created content including short features and the network's thirty-minute Facing Suicide in Iowa documentary, which profiles Iowa families who have been affected by suicide. Clips from the national documentary produced by Twin Cities PBS, Facing Suicide, will also be shown.Following the screening, a panel discussion will be moderated by Peggy Huppert, executive director of NAMI Iowa. Panelists will include Drew Martel, director of crisis services, with Foundation 2; Mary Neubauer, a mother and mental-health advocate; and Brian Carico, an educator and mental-health advocate.

"Suicide is one of those things people don't want to talk about, but it's so important that we do," said Huppert. "Telling our stories, sharing and supporting each other is the first step toward prevention and healing."

Guests may join in person at the Iowa PBS studios in Johnston or join virtually through an online screening platform, OVEE. Register for free at iowapbs.org/events. This event is made possible in part by a grant from Twin Cities PBS.

As Iowa's only statewide television network, Iowa PBS's mission to educate, inform, enrich, and inspire Iowans guides its quality, noncommercial programming that tells Iowa's stories like no one else can. Four statewide, public channels offer programs of lasting value to Iowans, regardless of where they live or what they can afford: Iowa PBS .1, Iowa PBS KIDS .2, Iowa PBS WORLD .3 and Iowa PBS Create .4 on Channel 11, Des Moines; Channel 12, Iowa City; Channel 21, Fort Dodge; Channel 24, Mason City; Channel 27, Sioux City; Channel 32, Waterloo; Channel 32, Council Bluffs; Channel 36, Davenport; and Channel 36, Red Oak. More information can be found at iowapbs.org.

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