| Literature DB >> 34112141 |
Elsie Breet1, Matsie Matooane2, Mark Tomlinson3,4, Jason Bantjes3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Youth suicide prevention in high-schools and universities is a public health priority. Our aim was to propose a research agenda to advance evidence-based suicide prevention in high-schools and universities by synthesizing and critically reviewing the research focus and methodologies used in existing intervention studies.Entities:
Keywords: Campus-based; High-school; Prevention interventions; Students; Suicide prevention; University
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34112141 PMCID: PMC8194002 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-021-11124-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Prisma flowchart of Study Selection
Main outcomes of studies on universal campus-wide interventions
| Authors (year of publication) | Details of the intervention | Study design | Target of the intervention | Main findings | Effect Size |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aseltine et al., 2004 [ | Signs of Suicide (SOS) prevention program | RCT (wait-list control group with follow up at 3 months postintervention) | Reduce suicidal ideation | No significant reduction in suicidal ideation. | Small ( |
| Reduce suicide attempts | Significant reduction in suicide attempts. | Small ( | |||
| Change knowledge | Significant increase in knowledge. | Small ( | |||
| Change attitudes | Significant increase in adaptive attitudes toward suicide. | Small ( | |||
| Increase in help-seeking behaviour | No significant increase in help seeking in the form of treatment. No significant increase in help seeking from a friend. No significant increase in help seeking from an adult. | Small ( Small ( Small ( | |||
| Aseltine et al., 2007 [ | Signs of Suicide (SOS) prevention program | RCT (wait-list control group with follow up at 3 months postintervention) | Reduce suicidal ideation | No significant reduction in suicidal ideation. | Small ( |
| Reduce suicide attempts | Significant reduction in suicide attempt. | Small ( | |||
| Change knowledge | Significant increase in knowledge about suicide. | Small ( | |||
| Change attitudes | Significant increase in adaptive attitudes toward suicide. | Small ( | |||
| Increase in help-seeking behaviour | No significant increase in help seeking in the form of treatment. No significant increase in help seeking from a friend. No significant increase in help seeking from an adult. | Small ( Small ( Small ( | |||
| Britton et al., 2014 [ | Classroom-based, teacher implemented, mindfulness meditation intervention | RCT (active control condition with postintervention follow up only) | Reduce suicidal ideation Reduce suicidal behaviour | Significant reduction in suicidal ideation and self-harm. | Large ( |
| Kalafat & Elias, 1994 [ | Suicide awareness curriculum | Solomon four-groups design (physical education content control group with postintervention follow up only) | Change knowledge | Significant increase in suicide knowledge. | Large ( |
| Change attitudes | Significant change in positive attitudes towards suicide and helping others. | Small ( | |||
| Nasution et al., 2019 [ | Combination of training for mental health nurses (TKN), CBT and a peer leadership (PL) program | Quasiexperimental pre-post test design (care as usual control group with postintervention only follow up) | Reduce suicidal ideation | Significant reduction in suicidal ideation. | Insufficient statistics |
| Randell et al., 2001 [ | C-CARE - Counselors CARE | Experimental three-group design (care as usual control group with follow up at 4-weeks and 10-weeks) | Reduce suicide risk: unspecified | Significant reduction in suicide risks behaviours (thoughts, threats, and attempts) in intervention and control group. | Large ( |
| Randell et al., 2001 [ | CAST - C-CARE plus a 12-session Coping and Support Training | Experimental three-group design (care as usual control with follow up at 4-weeks and 10-weeks) | Reduce suicide risk: unspecified | Significant reduction in suicide risks behaviours (thoughts, threats, and attempts) in intervention and control group. | Large ( |
| Rogers et al., 2018 [ | Psychoeducation and Interpersonal exposure | RCT (control group browsed the National Diabetes Education website with a postintervention and 1-month follow up) | Reduce stigma | Significant reduction in stigma of suicide. | Small ( |
| Significant greater reduction in suicide-related stigma among those with prior exposure to suicide at post-intervention. | Small ( | ||||
| Significant greater reduction in suicide-related stigma among those with prior exposure to suicide at one-month follow-up. | Small ( | ||||
| Schilling et al., 2016 [ | Signs of Suicide (SOS) prevention program | RCT (wait-list control group with a 12-weeks post-baseline follow up) | Reduce suicidal ideation | No significant reduction in suicidal ideation. | Small ( |
| Reduce suicide plan | Significant reduction in suicide plan. | Large ( | |||
| Reduce suicide attempts | Significant reduction in suicide attempt. | Large ( | |||
| Change knowledge | Significant increase in knowledge. | Small ( | |||
| Change attitudes | Significant change in adaptive attitudes about suicide. | Small ( | |||
| Wasserman et al., 2015 [ | Question, Persuade, Refer (QPR) | Cluster-RCT (control group exposed to six educational posters displayed in their classrooms with a 3-month and 12-month follow up) | Reduce suicidal behaviour | No significant reduction in suicidal behaviour at 3-month follow up. | Small ( |
| No significant reduction in suicidal behaviour at 12-month follow-up. | Small ( | ||||
| Wasserman et al., 2015 [ | ProfScreen | Cluster-RCT (control group exposed to six educational posters displayed in their classrooms with a 3-month and 12-month follow up) | Reduce suicide attempts | No significant reduction in likelihood of suicide attempt at 3-month follow-up. | Small ( |
| Significant reduction in likelihood of suicide attempt at 12-month follow-up. | Large ( | ||||
| Wasserman et al., 2015 [ | Youth Aware of Mental Health Programme (YAM) | Cluster-RCT (control group exposed to six educational posters displayed in their classrooms with a 3-month and 12-month follow up) | Reduce suicide attempts | No significant reduction in the likelihood of suicide attempts at 3-month follow-up. | Small ( |
| No significant reduction in the likelihood of suicide attempts at 12-month follow-up. | Small ( | ||||
| Wulandari et al., 2019 [ | Peer leadership training (team formation and building, adolescent related projects, and team activities) | Quasi-experimental pretest–posttest design (no control group with postintervention follow up) | Reduce suicidal ideation | Significant reduction in suicidal ideation. | Insufficient statistics |
| Wyman et al., 2010 [ | Source of Strengths prevention program | RCT (wait-list control group with postintervention and 1 year follow up) | Increase help-seeking behaviour | Significant increase in positive expectation that adults at school would help suicidal students. | Medium ( |
| Significant increase in norms for help-seeking from adults at school. | Medium ( | ||||
| No significant increase in connecting distressed peers to adults. | Small ( |
aEffect size calculated by the authors and reported as it is reported in the original study
Main outcomes of studies on selective campus-based interventions
| Authors (year of publication) | Details of the intervention | Study design | Target of the intervention | Main findings | Effect Size |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mitchell et al., 2013 [ | Brief psychoeducation Question, Persuade, Refer (QPR) gatekeeper training | Open trial (no control group with a postintervention and 3 to 6 month follow up) | Change knowledge | Significant increase in knowledge of suicide prevention facts. | Large ( |
| Increase in help-seeking behaviour | No significant increase in ability to referred anyone to on-campus mental health services. | Small ( | |||
| Pasco et al., 2012 [ | Campus connect (didactic training and experimental exercises) gatekeeper training | Open trial (control group received a 1.5-h adapted format of Campus Connect with postintervention only) | Increase in help-seeking behaviour | Significant increase in crisis intervention skills. | Large ( |
| Rallis et al., 2018 [ | Brief Psychoeducation and experimental (modelled after the Campus Connect training) | Open trial (no control group and postintervention and 3 month follow up) | Change knowledge | Significant increase in declarative knowledge. | Large ( |
| Significant increase in perceived knowledge. | Large ( | ||||
| Significant reduction in declarative knowledge at 3-month follow-up. | Large ( | ||||
| Significant reduction in perceived knowledge at 3-month follow-up. | Large ( | ||||
| Increase in help-seeking behaviour | Significant increase in identifying any suicidal students. | Small ( | |||
| Significant increase in making at least one referral. | Small ( | ||||
| Taub et al., 2013 [ | Knowledge and crisis communications skills | Open trial (no control group and postintervention follow up) | Change knowledge | Significant increase in knowledge of suicide among new resident assistants. | Small (ηp2 = 0.16)a |
| Significant increase in knowledge of suicide warning signs among new resident assistants. | Small (ηp2 = 0.24)a | ||||
| Significant increase in places to refer among new resident assistants. | Small (ηp2 = 0.30)a | ||||
| No significant increase in knowledge of suicide among returning resident assistants. | Small (ηp2 = 0.00)a | ||||
| No significant increase in suicide warning signs among returning resident assistants. | Small (ηp2 = 0.00)a | ||||
| No significant increase in places to refer among returning resident assistants. | Small (ηp2 = 0.00)a | ||||
| Increase in help-seeking behaviour | No significant prediction of crisis communication skills among new resident assistants. | Small (ηp2 = 0.00)a | |||
| No significant prediction of crisis communication skills among returning resident assistants. | Small (ηp2 = 0.15)a | ||||
| Tompkins and Witt, 2009 [ | Brief psychoeducation Question, Persuade, Refer (QPR) gatekeeper training | Quasi-experimental non-equivalent control group design (control group option to be waitlisted or treatment as usual with postintervention and 6 month follow up) | Change knowledge | Significant increase among intervention group for self-evaluation of knowledge. | Medium ( |
| Increase in help-seeking behaviour | Significant increase among intervention group for perceived efficacy to refer. | Small ( | |||
| Wachter Morris et al., 2015 [ | The ALIVE @ Purdue train-the trainers program | Open trial (no control group with postintervention follow up) | Change knowledge | No significant increase in knowledge about suicide. | Medium ( |
| No significant increase in knowledge about potential warning signs. | Small ( | ||||
| No significant increase in knowledge about places to refer. | Small ( | ||||
| Increase in help-seeking behaviour | Significant increase in crisis-related communication skills. | Large ( | |||
| Cimini et al., 2014 [ | Gatekeeper training (tailored to group specific needs) involving didactic and experiential learning components highlighting the opportunity for behavioural rehearsal | Open trial (no control group with postintervention and 3-month follow up) | Change knowledge | Significant increase in knowledge about suicidal behaviour at postintervention. | Large ( |
| Significant reduction in knowledge about suicidal behaviour at follow up assessment. | Small ( | ||||
| Increase in help-seeking behaviour | Significant increase in comfort level to intervene with suicidal behaviour at postintervention. | Medium ( | |||
| Significant reduction in comfort level to intervene at follow up assessment but remained significantly higher than baseline. | Medium ( | ||||
| Cross et al., 2010 [ | Brief psychoeducation - QPR (Question, Persuade, Refer) gatekeeper training | Open trial (no control group with a postintervention follow up) | Change knowledge | Significant increase in knowledge about suicide at postintervention assessment. | Large ( |
| Increase in help-seeking behaviour | Significant increase in perceived efficacy to intervene in suicide at postintervention assessment. | Large ( | |||
| Hashimoto., 2016 [ | Gatekeeper-training based on the mental health first aid program | Single-arm follow-up study (no control group with postintervention and 1-month follow up) | Increase in help-seeking behaviour | Significant improvement in the competence of managing suicidal students and behavioural intention at postintervention. | Small ( |
| Significant improvement in the competence of managing suicidal students and behavioural intention at follow-up. | Small ( | ||||
| Significant improvement in the confidence of managing suicidal students and behavioural intention at postintervention. | Medium ( | ||||
| Significant improvement in the confidence of managing suicidal students and behavioural intention at follow-up. | Small ( | ||||
| Mclean et al., 2017 [ | Adapted version of brief psychoeducation - Question, Persuade, Refer (QPR) gatekeeper training | RCT (stress and time management skills training program with a 16 weeks postintervention follow up) | Increase in help-seeking behaviour | Non-significant increase in number of interventions performed. | Small (ηp2 = 0.002)a |
| Non-significant increase in number of times approached by a resident. | Small (ηp2 = 0.001)a | ||||
| Non-significant increase in number of suicidal residents reported. | Small (ηp2 = 0.005)a | ||||
| Non-significant increase in suicidal thought severity. | Small (ηp2 = 0.012)a | ||||
| Shannonhouse et al., 2017 [ | Brief Psychoeducation -Applied Suicide Intervention skills training (ASIST) | Quasi-experimental pretest–posttest design (wait-list control group with postintervention follow up only) | Change knowledge | Significant increase in knowledge about suicide across time. | Small (ηp2 = 0.28)a |
| Change attitudes | Significant increase in participants’ attitudes about suicide across time. | Small (ηp2 = 0.32)a | |||
| Increase in help-seeking behaviour | Significant increase in comfort to respond to persons-at-risk. | Small (ηp2 = 0.25)a | |||
| Significant increase in competence to respond to persons-at-risk. | Small (ηp2 = 0.38)a | ||||
| Significant increase in confidence to respond to persons-at-risk. | Small (ηp2 = 0.14)a | ||||
| Wyman et al., 2008 [ | QPR (Question, Persuade, Refer) gatekeeper training versus wait-list control group | RCT (wait-list control group with postintervention and 1 year follow up) | Change knowledge | Significant increase in self-reported knowledge. No significant increase noted among staff who received a 30-min refresher training several months after initial training. | Small ( |
| Increase in help-seeking behaviour | Significant increase in appraisals of efficacy to perform a gatekeeper role. | Large ( | |||
| Significant increase in access to services for suicidal students. | Small ( | ||||
| No significant increase in comfort in asking about suicide. | Small ( | ||||
| No significant increase in referral behaviours. | Small ( | ||||
| No significant increase in asking about distress. | Small ( | ||||
| Indelicato et al., 2011 [ | Brief psychoeducation - QPR (Question, Persuade, Refer) gatekeeper training | Between-subjects design (no control group with 1 month and 3 month postintervention follow up) | Change knowledge | Significant increase in self-reported knowledge about suicide. | Insufficient statistics |
| Significant increase in self-reported knowledge about facts on suicide prevention. | Insufficient statistics | ||||
| Significant increase in self-reported knowledge about warning signs of suicide. | Insufficient statistics | ||||
| Significant increase in self-reported knowledge about how to ask someone about suicide. | Insufficient statistics | ||||
| Significant increase in self-reported knowledge about how to persuade someone to get help. | Insufficient statistics | ||||
| Significant increase in self-reported knowledge about how to get help for someone. | Insufficient statistics | ||||
| Significant increase in self-reported knowledge about information about local resources. | Insufficient statistics | ||||
| Significant increase in self-reported knowledge about belief that asking about suicide is appropriate. | Insufficient statistics | ||||
| Significant increase in self-reported knowledge about likelihood to ask someone about thoughts of suicide if concerned for them. | Insufficient statistics | ||||
| Increase in help-seeking behaviour | Significant increase in confidence in how to respond to the situation. | Insufficient statistics | |||
| Significant increase in comfort talking about suicide. | Insufficient statistics | ||||
| Significant increase in effectiveness of the suicide prevention intervention. | Insufficient statistics | ||||
| No significant were found regarding making a referral for help and taking the person to a mental health professional. | Insufficient statistics | ||||
aEffect size calculated by the authors and reported as it is reported in the original study
Main outcomes of studies on indicated interventions for high-risk students
| Authors (year of publication) | Details of the intervention | Study design | Target of the intervention | Main findings | Effect Size |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eggert et al., 1995 [ | At risk high school students - assessment protocol plus 1-semester Personal Growth Class (PGC l) | Controlled before and after study (care-as-usual control group with a postintervention follow up) | Reduce suicidal behaviour | A total of 85% of the youth in Groups I reduced suicide-risk behaviours by 25%, with Group I showing a greater decline in suicide-risk behaviours than Group II. | Insufficient statistics |
| Eggert et al., 1995 [ | At risk high school students - assessment protocol plus 2- semesters Personal Growth Class (PGC ll) | Controlled before and after study (care-as-usual control group with a postintervention follow up) | Reduce suicidal behaviour | A total of 65% of Group II showed reduced suicide-risk behaviours by 25%. | Insufficient statistics |
| Eggert et al., 2002 [ | Counselors-CARE (C-CAST): assessment interview, counselling session, and social ‘connections’ intervention | Controlled before and after study (care-as-usual control group with a postintervention and 10 week follow up) | Reduce suicidal behaviour | Statistics were not reported for interventions and control separately. Group x Trend Interaction demonstrate that the pattern of change differed significantly between at least one of the three groups. Not clear from the stats how these differed. | Insufficient statistics |
| Eggert et al., 2002 [ | CAST: combination of the C-CARE intervention (i.e. assessment interview, counselling session, and social ‘connections’ intervention) followed by a small group prevention program | Controlled before and after study (care-as-usual control group with a postintervention and 10 week follow up) | Reduce suicidal behaviour | Statistics were not reported for interventions and control separately. Group x Trend Interaction demonstrate that the pattern of change differed significantly between at least one of the three groups. Not clear from the stats how these differed. | Insufficient statistics |
| Fitzpatrick et al., 2005 [ | Brief video intervention regarding problem solving and coping skills | RCT (time-matched intervention focusing on physical health issues for control group with a 1 week, 2 weeks, and 1-month postintervention follow up) | Reduce suicidal ideation | No significant difference between intervention and control group with regard to suicidal ideation at baseline. | Insufficient statistics |
| Fukumori et al., 2017 [ | Three-day individual intervention program of structured writing that incorporates the emotional regulation group program and the DBT workbook | RCT (wait-list control group with a postintervention, 2 week and 1-month follow up) | Reduce suicidal ideation | No significant reduction in suicidal ideation. | Small ( |
| Hetrick et al., 2017 [ | Internet-based cognitive behavioural therapy (Reframe-IT) | RCT (treatment-as-usual control group with a 10 week and 22 week postintervention follow up) | Reduce suicidal ideation | No significant reduction in suicidal ideation at postintervention assessment. | Small ( |
| King et al., 2015 [ | Electronic bridge mental health services (eBridge) | RCT (treatment-as-usual control group with an 8 week postintervention follow up) | Increase in help-seeking behaviour | Significant increase in readiness to intervene with own suicidal behaviour by talking to family. | Large |
| Significant increase in readiness to intervene with own suicidal behaviour by talking to a friend. | Large ( | ||||
| Significant increase in readiness to intervene with own suicidal behaviour by seeing a mental health professional. | Large ( | ||||
| No significant increase in readiness to seek information. | Large ( | ||||
| No significant increase in readiness to seek out self-help or a support group. | Small ( | ||||
| No significant increase in readiness to seek academic support services. | Small ( | ||||
| Reduce stigma | Significant reduction in level of personal stigma scores at postintervention. | Large ( | |||
| Significant reduction in level of perceived public stigma at postintervention. | Medium ( | ||||
| Lin et al., 2019 [ | Cognitive therapy group program | RCT (cognitive therapy control group with a 4-, 8-, 20-, and 32-week postintervention follow up) | Reduce suicidal ideation | Significant reduction in suicidal ideation at 4 weeks follow up. | Large ( |
| Significant reduction in suicidal ideation at 8 weeks follow up. | Large ( | ||||
| Significant reduction in suicidal ideation at 20 weeks follow up. | Large ( | ||||
| Significant reduction in suicidal ideation at 32 weeks follow up. | Large ( | ||||
| Reduce suicidal behaviour | Significant reduction in suicide attempt 4 week follow up. | Small ( | |||
| Significant reduction in suicide attempt at 8 weeks follow up. | Small ( | ||||
| Significant reduction in suicide attempt at 20 weeks follow up. | Small ( | ||||
| Significant reduction in suicide attempt at 32 weeks follow up. | Small (d = 0.14) | ||||
| Lin et al., 2019 [ | Dialectical behaviour therapy group program | RCT (cognitive therapy control group with a 4-, 8-, 20-, and 32-week postintervention follow up) | Reduce suicidal ideation | Significant reduction in suicidal ideation found at 4 weeks follow up. | Large ( |
| Significant reduction in suicidal ideation found at 8 weeks follow up. | Large ( | ||||
| Significant reduction in suicidal ideation found at 20 weeks follow up. | Large ( | ||||
| Significant reduction in suicidal ideation found at 32 weeks follow up. | Large ( | ||||
| Reduce suicidal behaviour | Significant reduction in suicide reattempt at 4 weeks follow up. | Small ( | |||
| Significant reduction in suicide reattempt at 8 weeks follow up. | Small ( | ||||
| Significant reduction in suicide reattempt at 20 weeks follow up. | Small ( | ||||
| Significant reduction in suicide reattempt at 32 weeks follow up. | Small ( | ||||
| Pistorello et al., 2012 [ | 12-month long term Dialectical Behaviour Treatment | RCT (optimised treatment-as-usual control group with a 3 month and 18 month follow up) | Reduce suicidal behaviour | Significant reduction in suicidality (i.e., suicidal thoughts and the person’s estimation of the likelihood they would consider, attempt, and die from suicide in the future). | Medium ( |
| Tang et al., 2009 [ | Program of Intensive Interpersonal Psychotherapy for depressed adolescents with suicidal risk (IPT-A-IN) | RCT (treatment-as-usual control group with a postintervention follow up) | Reduce suicidal ideation | Significant reduction in suicidal ideation. | Medium ( |
| Thompson et al., 2000 [ | Personal Growth Semester 1 | Three-group, repeated measures design (Measure of Adolescent Potential for Suicide control group with 18 week postintervention follow up) | Reduce suicidal behaviour | Significant reduction in suicide risk behaviours. | Small ( |
| Thompson et al., 2000 [ | Personal Growth Semester 2 | Three-group, repeated measures design (Measure of Adolescent Potential for Suicide control group with 18 week postintervention follow up) | Reduce suicidal behaviour | Significant reduction in suicide risk behaviours. | Small ( |
| Xavier et al., 2019 [ | Problem solving intervention | RCT (care-as-usual control group with 1-, 3-, and 6 month follow up | Unspecified: suicidal orientation | Significant reduction in suicidal orientation at postintervention assessment. | Large (ηp |
| Significant reduction in suicidal orientation at 6-months follow up assessment. | Medium (ηp |
aEffect size calculated by the authors and reported as it is reported in the original study
Research priorities to advance evidence-based suicide prevention practices in high-schools and universities
• Expand research in LMICs and diverse cultural settings. • Conduct translational research to guide the cultural adaptation and application of suicide prevention interventions that have been developed and tested in high-income settings. • Develop and test interventions not premised on an “identify-and-refer” model of suicide prevention for use in low-resource environments where there are not adequate referral networks. • Increase epidmiological research and population survailance of suicdal behaviour among adolescents and young-adults in LMICs, to advocate for making suicide prevention a priority in high-schools and univeties. • Draw on implementation science research to better understand how the implementation of interventions influences their effectiveness. • Increase the number of high quality studies that have suicide deaths as the primary outcome. • Increase the use of well-designed multi-site studies to explore contextual variables influencing implementation and outcomes. • Utilise multi-site studies, where the campus is the unit of analysis and/or a key variable for assessing outcomes. • Utilise cluster randomization trials and co-ordination of studies across a large number of sites in a range of diverse settings. • Utilise well designed randomized controlled trials and pragmatic trials to culturally adapt and test gatekeeper training in LMICs. |