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Increasing Help-Seeking Behavior Among Transitioning Veterans at Risk for Suicide With Online Gatekeeper Training

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Suicide Prevention
Interventions
Behavioral: Sham intervention
Behavioral: VA S.A.V.E.
Registration Number
NCT04565951
Lead Sponsor
VA Office of Research and Development
Brief Summary

The purpose of this study is to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of a gatekeeper training called VA S.A.V.E. which was developed through a partnership between the VA and the PsychArmor Training Institute. Gatekeeper training teaches "gatekeepers" skills in how to identify a person with suicide risk, inquire about suicidal thoughts, and help make a connection to professional treatment. VA S.A.V.E. is a brief, novel online gatekeeper training that was created and designed specifically for Veterans and their family and friends. In this study, the investigators will recruit Veterans who have recently transitioned out of the military, as well as their family and friends. Participants in the study will be asked to complete a survey, watch the VA S.A.V.E. training, and complete several follow-up surveys over six months. A small subset of participants will also be invited to participate in an interview.

Detailed Description

Background: Suicide is an urgent public health crisis, and transitioning Veterans (those who have recently separated from the military) are a high-risk group for suicide. A key component to advancing suicide prevention efforts among at-risk Veterans is to address low levels of help-seeking and engagement in treatment, including Veterans Health Administration (VHA) care. Veterans are most likely to disclose suicidal thoughts to their close supports-family members, friends, and their peers. However, Veterans and their close supports rarely receive training in how to help a peer at risk of suicide, despite strong interest in such training. Gatekeeper training is a key strategy with potential to help address these challenges. Gatekeeper training teaches "gatekeepers" skills in how to identify a Veteran with suicide risk, inquire about suicidal thoughts, and help make a connection to professional treatment; it may benefit the trainee's own mental health too. VA S.A.V.E., developed through a partnership between the VA and the PsychArmor Training Institute, is a brief, novel online gatekeeper training designed for Veterans and their close supports.

Significance/Impact: This project focuses on VA's topic clinical priority, suicide prevention. The 2019 VA and Department of Defense Clinical Practice Guidelines also identified gatekeeper training as an important research gap and priority for future research. This research design addresses three separate goals and objectives contained in VA's National Strategy for Preventing Veteran Suicide, including involvement of Veterans' close supports.

Innovation: This proposal employs the novel approach of recruiting Veterans and their close supports through online social media advertisements, allowing for broad outreach, suicide prevention targeting Veterans outside the VA network, and the potential to test the effectiveness of gatekeeper training on a large scale. Online gatekeeper trainings are highly scalable public health strategies with the potential to diffuse through online social networks.

Specific Aims: The primary objective is to conduct a pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of the online gatekeeper training VA S.A.V.E. To reach this objective the investigators will achieve these aims: 1) Determine the feasibility of recruiting participants via social media, engaging them to participate in an online gatekeeper training program, and retaining them in an online intervention study; and 2) Determine the acceptability of VA S.A.V.E. in a pilot RCT, and evaluate measures for use in a future larger-scale RCT.

Methodology: This is a two-arm pilot randomized clinical trial involving 200 participants. Participants will be recruited through social media advertisements targeting transitioning Veterans and their close supports (family and friends). Participants will be randomized to take the VA S.A.V.E. gatekeeper training or a "sham" control training and followed for 6 months. Mixed quantitative and qualitative methods will be used to assess outcomes on feasibility and acceptability. Additional data collection and analysis of measures related to suicide prevention, such as gatekeeper behaviors, knowledge, stigma, self-efficacy, and social norms measures will help prepare for a larger-scale RCT.

Implementation/Next Steps: By using an extremely scalable intervention and building off existing VA practices and partnerships, this project will be very well-positioned for further evaluation and implementation into VA practice if found to be effective. It is freely available online, making it highly amenable to being rapidly taken to scale. Results of this project will inform future efforts to disseminate and/or revise VA S.A.V.E.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
281
Inclusion Criteria
  • A veteran who has served on active duty in the U.S. Armed Forces within the prior 12 months, OR a person who feels "close to" a veteran; AND
  • Social contact with a veteran at least weekly
Exclusion Criteria
  • Lack a U.S. phone number, email, or computer access; OR
  • Not fluent in English; OR
  • Have previously taken or intend to take VA S.A.V.E. training; OR
  • Duplicate study entry or misrepresentation of veteran status.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Sham armSham interventionParticipants in this arm will receive a "sham" training, not the intervention, consisting of information unrelated to suicide prevention but relevant to transitioning veterans and their loved ones.
Treatment armVA S.A.V.E.Participants in this arm will receive the intervention, VA S.A.V.E.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Survey Completion Rates1-month follow-up, 2-month follow-up, 3-month follow-up, 4-month follow-up, 5-month follow-up, 6-month follow-up

Survey completion at each survey timepoint

Recruitmentbaseline (T=0)

Number enrolled; proportion of eligible who enroll

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Satisfaction With the Intervention VideoPost-training (immediately after), approximately 1 hour

An 8-item satisfaction questionnaire, adapted from the CSQ-8, where higher scores indicate greater satisfaction. Total scores range from 8 - 32, with higher scores indicating greater satisfaction.

Training CompletionPost-training (immediately after), approximately 1 hour

Percentage of training completed

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

VA Portland Health Care System, Portland, OR

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Portland, Oregon, United States

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