View clinical trials related to Suicidal Ideation.
Filter by:This pragmatic clinical trial will evaluate the effectiveness of two population-based outreach programs for preventing suicide attempts among patients identified as at-risk. The study will be conducted at Kaiser Permanente (KP) Washington (the lead site) and at HealthPartners, KP Colorado and KP Northwest. Electronic health records will be used to identify outpatients aged 18 or older who respond to a routinely administered PHQ depression questionnaire by reporting thoughts of death or self-harm "most of the days" or "nearly every day". This trial will be limited to patients receiving care from one of the four participating health systems. Eligible patients will be automatically assigned to continue in usual care (1/3) or to either of the two intervention programs (1/3 each). Those assigned to usual care will not be contacted at all by study staff and will continue to receive usual care from treating primary care and mental health providers. Both intervention programs involve outreach by Epic secure messaging (with optional telephone outreach for those not reading messages). The Care Management intervention includes routine outreach to assess ongoing risk of suicide attempt and care management to monitor and facilitate ongoing engagement in outpatient follow-up. The Care Manager will coordinate care with treatment by primary and behavioral health care providers using Epic Staff Messaging (or telephone contacts if necessary). The Skills Training intervention uses an online skills training program to support patients in developing and using self-management skills for emotion regulation and crisis management. A Coach will monitor each participant's use of the program and send periodic messages (using Epic secure messaging) to encourage and support use of the program and practice of program skills. Each intervention continues for up to one year. In all three groups (Usual Care, Care Management, and Skills Training) virtual data warehouse data will be used to identify likely suicide attempts over 18 months following randomization. Analyses will compare risk of suicide attempt among all those randomized, regardless of response to the initial invitation or level of participation in the intervention programs. Comparison of all those randomized is the only scientifically valid method for assessing the overall impact of either program on population-level risk of suicide attempt.
The investigators propose to explore the link between bipolar disorder, anxiety, and suicide by investigating intertemporal discounting in depressed, suicidal patients with bipolar I and II disorder who have various levels of anxiety. The investigators will determine the effect of anxiety on their intertemporal discounting (small rewards now compared to larger rewards later) in a decision-making paradigm and investigate the associated functional neuroanatomy using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).
The primary objective of this study is to assess the efficacy of ketamine versus a placebo for the short-term (at 72h, i.e. 24h after the last perfusion) relief of suicidal ideation, measured using the BSS hetero questionnaire, in patients hospitalized for suicide risk.
There is a strong association between sleep disturbance and suicidal thoughts and behaviors. Sleep disturbance is also highly comorbid with other common conditions associated with suicide such as depression and posttraumatic stress disorder. Accordingly, this application focuses on improving sleep as a novel suicide prevention strategy that can be delivered to a broad range of Veterans. This pilot proposal specifically examines how Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia, an efficacious treatment for insomnia, may reduce suicidal ideation in Veterans who also suffer from additional conditions. The proposal further suggests that adding this sleep intervention to usual care may further enhance overall care by increasing the utilization of recommended treatments for depression and posttraumatic stress disorder.
Patients with PTSD, and frequent nightmares, and mild-moderate suicidal ideation, who are already taking a Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitor (SSRI) or Serotonin Norepinephrine Reuptake Inhibitor (SNRI) will be randomized to either prazosin or placebo. The investigators hypothesize that patients receiving prazosin will have a greater reduction in suicidal ideation.
With the long-term goal of improving interventions for late-life suicide, the purpose of this study is to examine whether a mechanism by which behavioral interventions reduce risk for late-life suicide is by increasing social connectedness. The investigators propose to examine whether a manualized intervention that targets connectedness--ENGAGE--increases connectedness in older adults who report clinically significant depression and disconnectedness-operationalized as feeling lonely and/or like a burden on others. The investigators propose a randomized controlled trial comparing the ENGAGE intervention with care-as-usual (CAU), using n=100 primary care patients aged ≥ 60 years who report social disconnectedness (i.e., loneliness or burdensomeness) and either Minor or Major Depression. At baseline, 3-week, 6-week and 10-week assessments, subjects will report on social connectedness, depression, and suicide risk. The investigators hypothesize that those subjects assigned to ENGAGE will report greater increases in connectedness-measured as greater belongingness and lower burdensomeness-compared to CAU; that ENGAGE will produce greater reductions in depression and suicide ideation than CAU; and that changes in depression will be accounted for changes in social connectedness.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the efficacy of intranasal esketamine 84 milligram (mg) compared with intranasal placebo along with standard care treatment, in reducing the symptoms of major depressive disorder (MDD) (an affective disorder manifested by either a dysphoric mood or loss of interest or pleasure in usual activities, the mood disturbance is prominent and relatively persistent), including the risk for suicide as assessed by the Investigator, in participants who will be assessed to be at imminent risk for suicide.
The prevalence of suicidal behaviors in adolescents remains unacceptably high and is a significant public health concern. The investigators propose a new treatment approach in which skills to increase positive emotions are taught to the most vulnerable at-risk adolescents, those admitted to an inpatient psychiatric unit due to suicide risk. The investigators believe that teaching skills to increase positive emotions will lead to better problem-solving, increased social support, and other benefits which will serve as protective factors and decrease suicide risk.
Children and adolescents with early-onset bipolar disorder (BD) are at high risk for intentionally hurting themselves. Although there are therapies in existence for these youths with BD, they do not address suicide prevention specifically. Mentalization-based therapy for adolescents (MBT-A) has been shown to be helpful in reducing self-harm in the adolescent and adult population with borderline personality disorder. The investigators will modify the MBT-A treatment procedures for persons with BD who have had a recent period of suicidal ideation or behavior.
This project aims to develop and refine a suicide intervention protocol, and pilot test a culturally tailored randomized control trial to reduce suicidal thoughts among U.S. Chinese older adults. During the first phase of the study, the investigators plan to invite the community advisory board and key stakeholders to participate in the iterative design and refinement of the study protocol. During the second phase of the project and after the initial screening and based on a specific set of inclusion criteria, the investigators will invite U.S. Chinese older adult to participate in a pilot randomized control trial of a culturally adapted intervention to reduce the frequency and intensity of suicidal thoughts in Chinese older adults. During the third phase of the project, the investigators plan to invite pilot intervention participants as well as key stakeholders and health care professionals on the cultural acceptability of the pilot intervention. Through the achievement of these objectives, the investigators will set the foundation to fully test a culturally adapted in-home intervention, which may be particularly suitable for Chinese older adults with suicidal thoughts as it addresses cultural-specific barriers and integrates care management within existing community services agencies using non-mental health professionals, including community health workers.