Self Inflicted Injury Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effects of Community-based Caring Contact on Post-discharge Young Adults With Self-harm - a Multi-center Randomized Controlled Trial
The study will determine whether community-based caring contact via a mobile app connection with or without volunteer support in addition to treatment as usual (psychiatric and psychosocial treatments) has an effect on suicidal ideation and treatment compliance among post-discharge self-harm young adults.
The proposed study will determine whether community-based caring contact via a mobile app connection with or without volunteer support in addition to treatment as usual (TAU; psychiatric and psychosocial treatments) is effective in reducing suicidal ideation, enhancing treatment compliance, reducing thwarted belongingness and perceived burdensomeness and hopelessness among post-discharge self-harm young adults, and if personalized contact by volunteers has additional effects reducing suicidal ideation among post-discharge self-harm individuals. 108 participants aged 18-45 with an index self-harm episode will be recruited from the Accident & Emergency Department (AED) of 4 local public hospitals, and randomized into the TAU, mobile app group with, and without volunteer support. Each participant will complete a questionnaire at the 4 measurement time points at baseline (T0), one-month (T1) and the end of the 2-month intervention period (T2), and post-intervention at the three-month point (T3) from the baseline. The primary outcomes include Suicidal ideation, hopelessness, thwarted belongingness & perceived burdensomeness, treatment (TAU) compliance, and suicidality. ;