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Clinical Trial Summary

The goal of this study is to assess the feasibility and acceptability of implementing a co-designed suicide prevention package of implementation strategies (SuPP) in a pilot open, non-randomized, clinical trial. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. What is the feasibility of implementing the SuPP open clinical trial? 2. What is the degree to which SuPP was implemented correctly 3. What is the perceived acceptability of SuPP among providers and patients? Participants will include healthcare providers and patients at risk for suicide. Providers will identify and provide culturally adapted safety planning and contact follow up to at-risk patients over a period of six months. Patients will receive an initial culturally adapted patient-centered safety plan and receive a tapered series of contacts (phone calls) over the course of six months from health providers.


Clinical Trial Description

Low and middle income countries (LMIC) hold 75% of the world's suicides. Suicide disproportionately affects those living in poverty and in adverse conditions and, in LMIC settings, up to 20% of maternal deaths are due to suicide. In Nepal, suicide is a leading cause of death among women of reproductive age. Despite the disproportionate burden, systematic suicide detection and prevention mechanisms are nearly non-existent. Deaths are only a fraction of the burden, where evidence from Nepal reports between 5 and 27% of individuals have current thoughts of suicide. Suicidal behavior remains under-reported and is difficult for clinicians to properly identify and monitor, especially in limited health systems. This calls for improved understanding of how to identify and monitor individuals at risk for suicidal behavior. Therefore, this study seeks to integrate existing hospital healthcare providers into suicide prevention, contributing much needed evidence for multi-pronged, accessible strategies to reduce a leading cause of death worldwide. This study's purpose is to adapt and pilot the implementation of packaged suicide prevention strategies in a low-resource setting. The impact involves informing an implementation plan to test in a fully powered future trial. Findings will contribute to the evidence of systems-integrated suicide prevention strategies and result in a multi-level package for mental health service integration that can be utilized around the world. Ultimately, this project will save lives and improve under-resourced health systems. The pilot trial is not powered for statistical analysis, but data will be monitored monthly and continuously analyzed to facilitate iterative revision, then finalization of the protocol. The implementation package to be tested (the Suicide Prevention Package, SuPP) will include a culturally adapted suicide crisis response plan and a series of contacts via phone call from a hospital healthcare provider. This is a small open, non-randomized, pilot trial to assess the feasibility and acceptability of SuPP within the existing health system. The investigators will select delivery agents, an implementation strategy, and complete SuPP training. The investigators will train the selected delivery agents and their supervisory team (e.g., hospital nurses, physicians, and department heads) in SuPP (detection, safety planning, brief contact follow up). Participants will be recruited through the hospital's emergency department. Following suicide risk detection (e.g., suicide attempt in the past 6 months), 24 at-risk patients will be enrolled in the open trial and given the full SuPP package. All participants will receive standard of care, the SuPP package is in addition. In accordance with recommendations for pilot trial studies, The investigators have established qualitative and quantitative indicators to guide decisions about what procedures to carry through to the full trial and when modifications should be made. Each patient will be provided contact and suicide crisis response planning (weekly, then tapering to monthly) for at least 6 months. SuPP feasibility and acceptability will be determined by the following criteria: delivery agent fidelity to SuPP elements at 75% or greater; retention of at least 70% of participants through 6 months of SuPP; fewer than 15% missing items on outcome measures across all assessments; 80% of delivery agents and patients finding SuPP acceptable. In domains where criteria are met, the investigators will retain the procedure for a future full trial. In domains where criteria are not met, the investigators will modify procedures for the future full trial. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT06094959
Study type Interventional
Source Yale University
Contact Ashley Hagaman, PhD
Phone 2487908954
Email ashley.hagaman@yale.edu
Status Recruiting
Phase N/A
Start date May 30, 2023
Completion date October 1, 2024

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