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Few empirically-based treatment models exist for adolescent suicide attempters post psychiatric hospitalization, despite the fact that managed care has limited the role of hospitalization to stabilization, rather than remission. This study will test the efficacy and initial outcomes of Attachment Based Family Therapy (ABFT) as an aftercare model to further gains made in inpatient treatment and reduce risk factors for future suicide attempts.
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Annually, more adolescents and young adults in the United States die from suicide than from cancer, heart disease, AIDS, birth defects, stroke, pneumonia, influenza and chronic lung disease combined (U.S. Public Health Service, 1999). Each year approximately 1 in 5 teenagers seriously consider killing themselves, over one million teenagers attempt suicide, and between 1,600 and 2,000 die by suicide (U.S. Public Health Service, 1999). Clearly, the need for more empirically based treatment models is urgently needed.
Typically, after a suicide attempt or reporting of suicidal ideation with an intent or plan to kill themselves, adolescents are treated in a psychiatric hospital. In the past, an inpatient stay could provide intensive individual, group, family, and or medication therapy. However, managed care has shifted the goal of hospitalizations from treatment to stabilization. Adolescents are discharged when they are deemed to be no longer a threat to themselves, leaving the treatment of precipitating factors to outpatient aftercare. In a recent review of 21 studies on compliance with aftercare, Daniel and colleagues (2004) found that a majority of youth do received aftercare, but that noncompliance is very high. Very little evidence was found to support the effectiveness of aftercare. Surprisingly there are no studies on preventing adolescent reattempts of suicide after hospitalization. Important studies by Harrington et al. (1998) and King et al. (2007) have shown some promising results for aftercare reducing suicidal ideation, but no published studies have looked at preventing reattempts. Given the dearth of treatment studies for youth attempting suicide in general, it is not surprising that there are even fewer studies of aftercare for this population. Yet, given the high cost of even a short inpatient treatment, developing and testing effective aftercare programs that build on the gains made in inpatient treatment for youth who attempt suicide seems warranted.
One promising outpatient treatment approach for this population is Attachment-Based Family Therapy (ABFT; Diamond et al., 2002). ABFT is a manualized, brief (i.e., 12 to 16 week) family-based model designed specifically for treating depressed and suicidal adolescents. The model aims to reduce adolescent depression, suicidal ideation, family conflict, parental criticism, and adolescent isolation and hopelessness; all factors associated with adolescent suicide attempts (e.g., Brent et al., 1988). To accomplish these goals with the parent, ABFT aims to increase parental warmth, communication skills, and appropriate monitoring. For the adolescent, treatment aims to improve interpersonal problem solving, emotional regulation, and reengagement with positive prosocial activities (e.g., school, job, peers). As communication improves and trust is rebuilt, the parents reclaim their position as a secure base for adolescent development. The family becomes a context where adolescents learn to express their emotions and thoughts (including their suicidal ideation) in a differentiated and regulated manner, problem solve, and control their impulses. In many families, repairing the attachment rupture requires a "working through" of prior traumatic events (e.g., loss, divorce, abuse) often associated with the suicidal behavior. As adolescents become less preoccupied with suicide ideation and family conflict, treatment focuses on parents helping their adolescent navigate the challenges of school, peer relations and other life domains.
ABFT has recently proven effective in reducing suicidal ideation and depressive symptoms in a non-hospitalized population identified in primary care (Diamond et al., 2007). This grant will set the foundation for a programmatic look at treating adolescents who have been psychiatrically hospitalized for attempting suicide. This study will have two improvements over current aftercare services. First, it will improve the quality of aftercare by using an empirically based, family-based, manualized treatment. Second, it will rely on a continuity of care model where aftercare treatment begins while families are still in the hospital, potentially enhancing treatment compliance once the adolescent leaves the hospital.
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20 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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