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Reducing Firearm Suicide Among Veterans: Evaluating the Effectiveness of Peer-Delivered Lethal Means Counseling

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VA Office of Research and Development

Status and phase

Begins enrollment in 7 months
Phase 2
Phase 1

Conditions

Secure Firearm Storage
Suicide

Treatments

Behavioral: Peer Engagement and Exploration of Responsibility and Safety
Other: Active Control

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other U.S. Federal agency

Identifiers

NCT07033884
MHBC-003-24F
1 IK2 CX002877-01A1 (Other Grant/Funding Number)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Suicide prevention is a top priority for the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), with a major emphasis on developing innovative and effective ways to prevent firearm suicide. Research suggests that secure firearm storage can decrease risk for suicide and the current project aims to evaluate a novel approach to increasing secure storage through an experimental design. The intervention takes one-hour or less and involves a peer-to-peer discussion about secure firearm storage, focusing on participants' reasons for and against using more secure firearm storage practices. The project will evaluate whether Veterans who receive this intervention report greater use of secure firearm storage practices than Veterans who receive only psychoeducational materials on this topic. Secure firearm storage practices will be evaluated over the course of one year. It is hypothesized that Veterans who engage in the peer-to-peer intervention will report greater use of secure firearm storage practices than those who receive only psychoeducational materials. Relevant to Veterans' health, secure firearm storage decreases Veteran firearm suicide risk and may help prevent suicide. In addition, this peer-delivered intervention is preferred by Veterans, and has the flexibility to be implemented before suicide risk develops and in settings outside of the VA. This means the intervention has the potential to reach more Veterans, even those who do not receive VA healthcare.

Full description

Veterans die by suicide at a rate 1.72 times greater than civilian counterparts. Notably, 72% of Veteran suicides result from a firearm, making firearm suicide prevention a leading priority for the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). Secure firearm storage (e.g., unloaded, locked) mitigates risk of firearm suicide, but these practices are uncommon among firearm owning Veterans. Lethal means counseling (LMC), an intervention that promotes reduced access to potentially lethal suicide methods (e.g., firearms) through one-on-one interactions, is a promising approach to promoting secure firearm storage among Veterans. However, there are limitations to the reach and acceptability of LMC among firearm owning Veterans within VA, including healthcare providers' limited time during appointments and firearm owners' stated preference to discuss firearms with those perceived to be credible, such as fellow Veterans. As a result, most Veteran firearm owners, including those with recent suicidal ideation, report that they have not discussed firearm access with their healthcare providers. It is crucial to expand LMC efforts to non-clinician messengers to reach more Veterans. What remains unknown is how effective preferred messengers are in changing firearm storage behaviors, as well as what mechanisms impact or account for subsequent changes in firearm storage behaviors. Thus, there is a critical need to evaluate the effectiveness of peer-delivered LMC among Veteran firearm owners. Without such knowledge, preventing suicide within this population will likely remain difficult.

The overall objective of the current study is to estimate the effectiveness, as well as factors that impact or account for the effectiveness, of peer-delivered LMC. My central hypothesis is that peer-delivered LMC will lead to greater use of secure firearm storage and this will be accounted for and influenced by mechanisms conceptualized by the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB), those proposed to be relevant in prior research, and unique mechanisms that have yet to be identified. This hypothesis was formulated on the basis of preliminary data generated through a Clinical Sciences Research and Development Career Development Award-1. During that study, I adapted a healthcare provider-delivered LMC intervention, found to increase secure firearm storage among National Guard members, for peer-delivery through an expert panel. The resulting intervention, Peer Engagement and Exploration of Responsibility and Safety (PEERS), is a 15-60 minute one-on-one LMC session centered around Motivational Interviewing principles and delivered by Veterans. In a single arm pilot trial, PEERS was feasible and acceptable among Veteran firearm owners. Thus, the rationale for this project is to determine the effectiveness, as well as mechanisms that impact or account for the effectiveness, of PEERS, providing new opportunities for suicide prevention among Veteran firearm owners. Two specific aims are proposed:

  1. Estimate the superiority of PEERS compared to a psychoeducation control condition on secure firearm storage in a randomized controlled trial (N = 100; 1:1). My working hypothesis is Veterans receiving PEERS will demonstrate greater use of secure firearm storage than Veterans in the psychoeducation condition.
  2. Identify indirect (2a & 2c) and moderating (2b & 2c) effects of the relationship between PEERS and secure firearm storage. My working hypothesis, based on the TPB, is that changes in secure firearm storage will be indirect through attitudes towards secure firearm storage, subjective norms about secure firearm storage, perceived ease of changing firearm storage, and intentions to change firearm storage (2a). I further hypothesize, based on prior research, that primary motivation for ownership (personal/family protection), Posttraumatic Stress Disorder hyperarousal symptoms, and low belief in the relationship between firearms and suicide risk, will attenuate changes in secure firearm storage (2b). To identify other factors that may influence the relationship between PEERS and secure firearm storage, I will recruit up to 24 Veterans who participated in PEERS for individual qualitative interviews regarding barriers and facilitators to engagement in the intervention (2c).

Enrollment

100 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Veteran
  • Owns at least one personal firearm
  • Displays some level of unsecure firearm storage (i.e., scores < 6 on MIRECC Lethal Means Questionnaire eligibility screener)
  • Capable of meeting via virtual modalities for appointments (i.e., owns a device capable of connecting for virtual appointments, has internet access)

Exclusion criteria

  • Active psychosis
  • Insufficient English language skills
  • No reliable access to a telephone and/or device for attending appointments via virtual modalities
  • Prior participation in the PI's CDA-1 study (N = 16)

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

100 participants in 2 patient groups

PEERS
Experimental group
Description:
Veterans in this condition will complete the PEERS intervention and will receive the same psychoeducational materials as the active control group.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Peer Engagement and Exploration of Responsibility and Safety
Active Control
Other group
Description:
Veterans in this condition will receive psychoeducational materials on lethal means safety and will have NO interaction with peers.
Treatment:
Other: Active Control

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Amanda M Raines, PhD; Claire Houtsma, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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