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Brief Skills Training Intervention for Suicidal Individuals

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University of Washington

Status and phase

Completed
Phase 2
Phase 1

Conditions

Suicide

Treatments

Behavioral: Relaxation Training
Behavioral: DBT Brief Suicide Intervention

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02236325
40846-G

Details and patient eligibility

About

A significant percentage of individuals who die by suicide do not seek mental health services in the time preceding their death. This population is underserved and it is unclear what barriers keep them from seeking treatment. In order to begin a line of research aimed at addressing this high-risk population, this proposal rests on the hypothesis that suicidal individuals who do not seek treatment prior to attempting suicide experience the same psychopathological difficulties as suicidal individuals who do seek treatment - namely, severe emotion dysregulation. However, these non-treatment-seeker s will likely require more creative recruitment strategies and briefer interventions than treatment-seeking individuals. As such, this application proposes to use wide-reaching recruitment efforts throughout the community to locate and enroll individuals who are suicidal but not seeking treatment. Further, there is a paucity of empirical support for interventions targeting suicidal individuals. Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) is one of the few treatments that have been demonstrated to be effective with a suicidal population and is the only treatment whose effectiveness has been replicated. Previous research has suggested that an abbreviated version of the skills that are taught in DBT skills training have effectively reduced emotion dysregulation (i.e., depression and anxiety) in problem drinkers and the format of the proposed intervention is derived from this evidence-based emotion dysregulation intervention. As such, the proposed research is a randomized, controlled pilot trial of a very brief, one-time, skills-based intervention targeting difficulties in emotion regulation and distress tolerance.

This research aims to evaluate the safety of the intervention, the feasibility of the research methods (including the appropriateness of the relaxation training control condition), and to preliminarily estimate the immediate (one week) and long-term (one and three month) changes resulting from the DBT Brief Skills Intervention (DBT-BSI) relative to a relaxation training control on the primary outcomes of suicide ideation and emotion dysregulation as well as a number of secondary outcomes. These results will inform the design of a subsequent full-scale randomized controlled trial of the DBT-BSI.

Enrollment

93 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • 18+ years old
  • Suicidal ideation in the last week
  • Live within commuting distance to research office
  • Have not been engaged in mental health treatment in the past month
  • Consent to assessment

Exclusion criteria

  • Non-English speaking
  • Significant cognitive impairment

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

93 participants in 2 patient groups

DBT Brief Suicide Intervention
Experimental group
Treatment:
Behavioral: DBT Brief Suicide Intervention
Relaxation Training
Active Comparator group
Treatment:
Behavioral: Relaxation Training

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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