| Literature DB >> 29220633 |
Jacqueline Pistorello, David A Jobes, Scott N Compton, Nadia Samad Locey, Joseph C Walloch, Robert Gallop, Josephine S Au, Samantha K Noose, Maria Young, Jacquelyn Johnson, Yani Dickens, Patricia Chatham, Tami Jeffcoat, Georgia Dalto, Spondita Goswami.
Abstract
This pilot study investigated the potential to utilize adaptive treatment strategies for treating moderate to severe suicidal risk among college students. This article will describe the unique study design and report on feasibility and acceptability findings. A 2-stage Sequential Multiple Assignment Randomized Trial (SMART) was conducted: In Stage 1, 62 suicidal college students were randomized to either a suicide-focused or a treatment-as-usual condition (4-8 weeks). Those deemed insufficient responders were re-randomized to one of two Stage 2 interventions-both suicide-focused but one comprehensive and multimodal and the other flexible and theoretically agnostic (4-16 additional weeks). Recruitment rates were high, treatment dropout levels were lower than expected for the setting, study dropouts were rare, and counselors were able to deliver suicide-focused approaches with fidelity. Treatment satisfaction was high among clients and moderately high among counselors. Findings from this pilot show that a SMART is highly feasible and acceptable to suicidal college students, counselors, and campuses.Entities:
Keywords: CAMS; DBT; SMART; adaptive strategies; college students; suicidality
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29220633 PMCID: PMC6125229 DOI: 10.1080/13811118.2017.1392915
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Suicide Res ISSN: 1381-1118