Suicide Clinical Trial
Official title:
Improving Firearm Storage in Alaska Native Villages
Rates of suicide among young Alaska Native males are over ten-fold higher than among a
similar age cohort in the rest of the United States. A high proportion of these deaths are
associated with firearms. Firearms are an important part of the subsistence lifestyle of
this population, however restriction of access to guns by youth may be a promising strategy
to reduce the risk of suicides in this population. Previous research conducted in the first
phase of this project has demonstrated that about 75% of homes in rural southwest Alaskan
villages have guns, and only about 15% of these guns are locked; 6% are loaded.
The aims of this specific phase of the study to execute a randomized trial of an
intervention to improve firearm storage practices among residents of selected villages. Our
hypothesis is that households receiving training and equipment to store firearms in gun
lockers will be more likely to store their guns locked at 12 months, compared to households
not receiving the intervention.
Rates of suicide among young Alaska Native males are over ten-fold higher than among a
similar age cohort in the rest of the United States. A high proportion of these deaths are
associated with firearms. Firearms are an important part of the subsistence lifestyle of
this population, however restriction of access to guns by youth may be a promising strategy
to reduce the risk of suicides in this population. Recent work by the HIPRC has shown that
locked guns are associated with a 73% reduced risk of suicide, compared to unlocked guns.
Similar protective associations were found for unloaded guns. A recent pilot project to
improve the storage of guns conducted in southwest Alaska increased the proportion of
households having all guns locked from 15% to 85%. The aims of this proposed study are to
estimate the prevalence of firearm ownership and of specific firearm storage practices among
residents living in the Bristol Bay and Yukon-Kuskokwim regions of southwest Alaska and to
work with the Alaska Native health corporations to plan and execute a randomized trial of an
intervention to improve firearm storage practices among residents of selected villages. This
3-year study consists of two phases.
The first phase is a regional survey of households within 20 randomly selected villages in
southwest Alaska to estimate the extent of firearm ownership and existing storage practices
in these communities. This weighted sample would be extrapolated to an overall estimate of
these variables for each of the two Native corporations in the region. The second phase of
the study will be a two-arm randomized controlled trial of an intervention to increase the
proportion of households that store all of their firearms in a locked safe. A secondary
outcome will be to reduce the proportion of home reporting the presence of a loaded gun.
Households will be randomly assigned to either an early or late intervention group. The
'early' intervention group will receive the intervention at baseline. The 'late'
intervention group will receive the intervention 12 months after baseline. All eligible
households within participating villages will be educated about the potential protective
value of safe firearm storage practices, and then be offered a gun safe to store all of
their firearms. Household adults will be trained to use the safe and to carefully restrict
access to the guns by youth. Each household will complete a questionnaire about storage
practices and important co-variates at baseline, 12 months, and 18 months. Data will be
analyzed to detect differences, between groups, in the proportion of homes with unlocked
guns, and loaded guns, at 12 and 18 months after baseline. We estimate that the enrollment
of 350 homes at baseline should provide 90% power to detect differences of about 16-20
absolute percentage point difference between groups, depending on the baseline prevalence of
these variables. This study has the potential to have an important effect on firearm storage
patterns in a population at high risk for suicide. If proven successful, it could be
disseminated throughout Alaska and other high risk communities.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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