| Literature DB >> 29724203 |
Rose McCabe1, Ruth Garside2, Amy Backhouse1, Penny Xanthopoulou3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Every year, more than 800,000 people worldwide die by suicide. The aim of this study was to conduct a systematic review of the effectiveness of brief psychological interventions in addressing suicidal thoughts and behaviour in healthcare settings.Entities:
Keywords: Controlled studies; Effective communication; Suicidal ideation; Suicide; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29724203 PMCID: PMC5934886 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-018-1663-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Fig. 1PRISMA Flow diagram of the study selection and screening process
Fig. 2Risk of bias assessment (Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool for Randomized Controlled Trials)
Summary characteristics of included studies
| Participants | Nature of suicide risk | Study Design | Setting | Intervention | Control | Pre-intervention patient measures | Post-intervention patient measures | Outcomes | Follow up period | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fleischmann et al 2008 [ | 1867 Adults | Patients who have attempted suicide | RCT Individual randomization | Emergency care settings | One-hour individual information session & periodic follow-up contacts after discharge for 18 months | TAU (as per norms in the respective EDs) | Questionnaire based on the European Parasuicide Study Interview Schedule (EPSIS) and adapted to each site | One-page questionnaire: if patient still alive; if not cause of death; if yes any further suicide attempts; how the patient felt; needs for support | Primary: Completed suicide | 18 months |
| Gysin-Maillart et al 2016 [ | 120 Adults | Patients admitted to the ED who attempted suicide | RCT Individual randomization | Emergency department | 3 face-to-face therapy sessions supplemented by regular, personalized letters to the participants for 24 months | Enhanced TAU: TAU (inpatient, day patient, and individual outpatient care as considered necessary by the clinicians in charge) and one clinical interview | Suicide Status Form (SSF-III) and 33-item questionnaire to collect sociodemographic, health and suicidal behaviour data | Penn Helping Alliance Questionnaire; Beck Depression Inventory; Beck Scale for Suicide Ideation | Primary: Repeat suicide attempts Secondary: Suicidal ideation, Depression, Health-care utilisation. | 2 years |
| King et al 2015 [ | 49 Adolescents 65% female 14–19 years, | Patients with suicide risk factors | Pilot RCT Individual randomization | Emergency department | Personalized feedback, adapted motivational interview and follow-up note | Enhanced TAU (basic mental health resources: crisis card, written information about depression, suicide risk, firearm safety and local mental health services) | 2 questions based on the Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale; 15-item Suicidal Ideation Questionnaire – Junior (SIQ-JR); Reynolds Adolescent Depression Scale; Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test; Beck Hopelessness Scale | Two questions adapted from the Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale; Reynolds Adolescent Depression Scale; The Beck Hopelessness Scale; The Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test; Motivational interviewing | Depression, hopelessness, suicidal ideation and alcohol use. | 2 months |
| Miller et al 2017 [ | 1376 Adults | Patients attending ED with suicide attempt or ideation in previous week | Interrupted time series design | Emergency department | 1. Secondary suicide risk screening | TAU (usual care at each site) and contacts for 1 year | None | 1. Telephone interviews | Suicide attempts, Suicide composite: occurrence of suicide, suicide attempt, interrupted/ aborted attempts & suicide preparatory acts | 1 year |
Description of interventions
| Theoretical foundation | Characteristics of professionals delivering the intervention | Professional training in intervention | When was the intervention started | Intervention Components | No. & length of initial session/s | No., mode & frequency of follow up contacts | Who delivers contact/s in the ED | Who delivers contact/s after ED | Content of follow-up contacts | Intervention completion | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fleischmann et al 2008 [ | Not described | Trained psychiatrists, medical doctors, psychologists or psychiatric nurses | Not described | Within 3 days after assessment in ED | 1. Information session: information about suicidal behaviour as a sign of psychological and/or social distress, risk and protective factors, basic epidemiology, repetition, alternatives to suicidal behaviours, and referral options. | One 1-hr individual information session | 9 telephone /face-to-face contacts at 1, 2, 4, 7 and 11 week(s), and 4, 6,12 and 18 months) | Trained psychiatrists doctors, psychologists or psychiatric nurses | Doctor, nurse, psychologist | Phone calls or visits | 91% received the full intervention |
| Gysin-Maillart et al 2015 [ | Action Theory, Cognitive Behaviour Therapy, and Attachment Theory. | Four therapists: one psychiatrist, one psychologist experienced in clinical suicide prevention and two psychological therapists | 1-week ASSIP training. | Soon after assessment in ED | 1. Session 1: narrative interview - patients were asked to tell their personal stories about how they had reached the point of attempting suicide | Three 60–90 min sessions on a weekly basis | 6 letters over 24 months: every 3 months in the first year and every 6 months in the second year | Clinicians and therapists | Clinicians and therapists | Semi-standardized letters –to maintain the therapeutic relationship & reinforce safety strategy | 93% completed the intervention at 24 months (95% at 12 months) |
| King et al 2015 [ | Motivational Interviewing, Self Determination Theory, Theory of Health Behavior, and Theory of Planned Behavior | Three licensed Social Workers | Min 40 Hours - conducted by a member of the Motivational Interviewing Trainers’ Network | After initial emergency room visit | 1. Individual AMI: personalized feedback to the teen, to explore ambivalence, build discrepancy, enhance teen’s problem importance and readiness to change | One individual 30–45 min session | Handwritten follow-up note and a telephone check-in two to five days after ED visit to support and facilitate action plan implementation | Study therapists | Study therapists | Personalized follow up note & telephone check-in: Half receive telephone follow-up only. | 85% received the full intervention |
| Miller et al 2017 [ | Not described | ED physicians & nurses | Detailed manual of procedures, meetings and monthly teleconference to receive training updates, and problem solve | In the ED | 1. Secondary suicide risk screening by ED physician following an initial positive screen | Not described | Up to 7 brief (10–20 min) telephone calls to the patient and up to 4 calls to a significant other, at 6, 12, 24, 36, and 52 weeks | ED physicians and nursing staff | 10 advisors: 6 PhD psychologists, 3 psychology fellows, and 1 masters-level counselor | Case management, individual psychotherapy and significant other involvement following Coping Long Term with Active Suicide (CLASP)-ED protocol | 1. Secondary suicide risk screening: 89.4% |
Primary and Secondary Outcomes
| Suicide | Repeat suicide attempts | Suicide composite | Suicidal ideation | Depression | Health-care utilization | Hopelessness | Alcohol Use | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type of outcome | Behavioural | Behavioural | Behavioural | Self-rated | Self-rated | Self-report & records | Self-rated | Self-rated |
| Fleischmann et al 2008 [ | Fewer suicides: | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| Gysin-Maillart et al 2016 [ | n/a | Fewer suicide attempts | n/a | No difference found | No difference found | 72% fewer days in hospital after 1 year (ASSIP: 29 d; control group: 105 d; W = 94.5, | n/a | n/a |
| King et al 2015 [ | n/a | n/a | n/a | No difference found | Lower depression | n/a | No difference found | No difference found |
| Miller et al 2017 [ | n/a | Fewer suicide attempts: | Lower suicide composite: | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a |
TAU treatment as usual, INT intervention
aHigher score indicates lower risk of bias