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The goal of this study is to learn about a new, real-time, smartphone-based intervention aimed to decrease risk for suicide in adults who have been hospitalized for suicidal thoughts or behaviors. The main questions the investigators aim to answer are:
Participants will:
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Effective, scalable interventions for the highest-risk time for suicide - after inpatient psychiatric hospitalization - are urgently needed. The safety planning intervention (Stanley & Brown, 2012) involves developing a personalized list of prioritized coping strategies for suicidal crises, and has been shown to prevent suicidal behavior (e.g., Nuij et al., 2021). However, roughly 40% of patients with a safety plan never use it (Stanley et al., 2016). The safety plan also includes multiple components (e.g., different internal coping strategies, seeking social support), yet little is known about the internal and external contexts that may impact the accessibility and effectiveness of individual safety plan components. Improving both the ability to promote safety plan use when needed and the understanding of when specific coping strategies are most accessible and effective has the potential to optimize this already evidence-based intervention.
The aim of this study is to leverage the recent micro-randomized trial (MRT) design (Klasnja et al., 2015) to evaluate the proximal effects of automated, interactive, smartphone-based reminders to implement the safety plan and its coping strategies at different levels of suicidal urges and intent. Twenty-five (N = 25) adults hospitalized for suicidal thoughts or behaviors will undergo an intensive longitudinal monitoring protocol, which includes completing up to six brief smartphone surveys per day that assess momentary suicidal urges and intent on a 0 to 10 scale during hospitalization and the 28 days after discharge. After each post-discharge survey with reported high intensity suicidal urges or moderate intent, participants will be "micro-randomized" to receive either a series of automated interactive intervention messages or no intervention. Whether the message content is personalized (from the individual's safety plan) or general (top-rated from others' safety plans) and the specific coping strategy type(s) recommended will also be randomized. Brief proximal follow-up surveys will assess coping strategy use since the last survey prompting micro-randomization, perceived helpfulness of any coping strategies used, and momentary suicidal urges and intent. Qualitative and quantitative data on acceptability and feasibility will be collected from participants and used to inform future real-time intervention refinements. Preliminary efficacy data will be used to inform the development of future, larger-scale studies and the ultimate development of policies for novel just-in-time adaptive interventions that deliver the right time of support, at the right time, and in the right context, for individuals at risk for suicide.
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103 participants in 1 patient group
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Matthew Nock, PhD; Kate Bentley, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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