| Literature DB >> 32899637 |
Emma H Moscardini1, Ryan M Hill2, Cody G Dodd2, Calvin Do2, Julie B Kaplow2, Raymond P Tucker1.
Abstract
Extant literature has demonstrated that suicide safety planning is an efficacious intervention for reducing patient risk for suicide-related behaviors. However, little is known about factors that may impact the effectiveness of the intervention, such as provider training and comfort, use of specific safety plan elements, circumstances under which providers choose to use safety planning, and personal factors which influence a provider's decision to use safety planning. Participants were (N = 119) safety plan providers who responded to an anonymous web-based survey. Results indicated that most providers had received training in safety planning and were comfortable with the intervention. Providers reported that skills such as identifying warning signs and means safety strategies were routinely used. Providers who reported exposure to suicide were more likely to complete safety plans with patients regardless of risk factors. In addition, almost 70% of providers indicated a need for further training. These data provide important considerations for safety plan implementation and training.Entities:
Keywords: safety planning; suicide; suicide prevention
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32899637 PMCID: PMC7559434 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17186444
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Clinicians’ estimated percent of the time they include major components of the safety plan.
| Item |
|
| Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| When creating a safety plan, how often do you… | |||
| 1. Include individual warning signs/triggers of a crisis | 84.00 | 26.64 | 0–100 |
| 2. Include individual coping skills | 94.58 | 12.36 | 21–100 |
| 3. Include social coping skills/social distraction | 90.32 | 16.32 | 0–100 |
| 4. Include social help-seeking | 89.86 | 17.76 | 0–100 |
| 5. Include emergency resources/emergency contacts (e.g., hotlines, on-call clinicians, etc.) | 97.34 | 8.65 | 41–100 |
| 6. Include means restriction (e.g., limiting access to firearms, pills, etc.) | 86.26 | 24.35 | 0–100 |
| 7. Identify and write down reasons for living | 74.16 | 31.39 | 0–100 |
| 8. Have the patient write down their safety plan themselves | 61.05 | 33.87 | 0–100 |
| 9. Create physical reminders (e.g., a copy of the safety plan to keep with you) | 84.55 | 26.73 | 0–100 |
| 10. Create a Hope Box | 12.23 | 23.86 | 0–100 |
| 11. Create a Virtual Hope Box or use another safety planning app | 12.72 | 25.09 | 0–100 |
| 12. Use of a safety plan template | 69.64 | 39.32 | 0–100 |
| 13. Provide instruction on the proper use of the safety plan | 75.41 | 36.12 | 0–100 |
| 14. Practice using the safety plan in session | 46.07 | 39.75 | 0–100 |
| 15. Share the safety plan with a parent/guardian, significant other, or family member | 55.64 | 36.99 | 0–100 |
Frequency of clinician safety plan completion.
| Clinician Completes Safety Plan… | Frequency | Percentage |
|---|---|---|
| with all patients | 13 | 11.5 |
| when patients have thoughts about wanting to die, but not thoughts of dying by suicide | 57 | 50.4 |
| when patients have thoughts about ending their lives by suicide | 98 | 86.7 |
| when a patient has identified a method for suicide and has thoughts of dying by suicide | 83 | 73.5 |
| when a patient has begun preparing for suicide | 76 | 67.3 |
| when a patient has developed a suicide plan | 81 | 71.7 |
| when a patient has previously made a suicide attempt, but has not had recent thoughts of suicide | 47 | 41.6 |
| when a patient has previously made a suicide attempt and is having thoughts of suicide | 88 | 77.9 |
Note: N = 119.