Clinical Trials Logo

Suicide and Self-harm clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Suicide and Self-harm.

Filter by:
  • Active, not recruiting  
  • Page 1

NCT ID: NCT05579600 Active, not recruiting - Clinical trials for Suicide and Self-harm

Suicide Prevention for Justice Involved Managed Care Subscribers

Start date: September 1, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The goal of this clinical trial is to test the effects of two suicide prevention interventions for individuals released from jail. The main questions it aims to answer are: Does the use of Caring Contacts improve subscriber engagement with healthcare services while reducing suicide-related outcomes? and Will providing training and resources to behavioral health providers improve re-engagement with healthcare services for patients recently released from jail? Participants will include (1) subscribers of a managed care organization (MCO) and (2) behavioral health providers within the MCO system. Interventions include sending subscribers Caring Contacts letters for 6-months following jail release and providing resources and training to behavioral health providers to target healthcare re-engagement and suicide prevention.

NCT ID: NCT04235127 Active, not recruiting - Suicide Clinical Trials

The Catalonia Suicide Risk Code Epidemiology Study: an Epidemiological Study of Suicide Attempts in Catalonia, Spain

CSRC-Epi
Start date: June 2014
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

Suicide attempts (SA) constitute a major public health issue worldwide. Research suggests that 2.7% of adult people ever attempt suicide; among children and adolescents this is estimated to be 6.0%. SA are related to subsequent suicide which represents an annual loss of 34.6 million years of life worldwide. Suicide attempts are also related to persistent physical and mental health issues, psychiatric hospitalizations, impaired academic performance, unemployment, partner abuse victimization and perpetration, having children removed by social services, loneliness, relationship difficulties, impaired social functioning and low life satisfaction. Despite this considerable societal impact, there is a lack of epidemiological research focussing on providing suicide attempt surveillance in the population, to inform public health action aimed at reducing risk for suicide attempts in the population, and to provide data-driven support for suicide risk assessment across healthcare settings. To address this shortcoming, the investigators designed the Catalonia Suicide Risk Code Epidemiology study. Using centralized Electronic Healthcare Record data from the entire public healthcare system of Catalonia, Spain, the CSRC-Epi study aims to estimate reliable suicide incidence rates, identify suicide attempt risk factors, and develop validated suicide attempt risk prediction tools.