The investigators propose to utilize text messaging to create and investigate the efficacy of a Continuing Contacts via Text (CCVT) intervention that extends the continuity of care for Service Members with a recent suicide attempt and/or reported suicidal ideation by sending them non-demanding caring text messages at regular intervals over a 12-month period. Participants will be randomly assigned to receive Continuing Contacts via Text (CCVT) in addition to Treatment as Usual (TAU) or TAU alone. Aim 1: To determine if the addition of 12 months of CCVT to TAU (CCVT+TAU) results in lower rates of suicidal ideation and behavior relative to TAU alone. * Hypothesis 1a: Participants assigned to CCVT+TAU compared to TAU alone will experience reduced suicidal ideation at 12-month follow-up. * Hypothesis 1b: Over the 12 months following study enrollment, a smaller proportion of participants assigned to CCVT+TAU vs. TAU alone will have suicide risk incidents (i.e., those requiring medical evacuation or hospital admission). * Hypothesis 1c: Over the 12 months following study enrollment, CCVT+TAU vs. TAU alone will have fewer total number of suicide risk incidents requiring medical evacuation or hospital admission. Aim 2: To test two proposed mechanisms of action of CCVT outcome: 1) reduced "thwarted belongingness" and 2) increased engagement in behavioral health services. * Hypothesis 2a: The effect of CCVT+TAU compared to TAU alone will be mediated by reductions in "thwarted belongingness" from pre to post-study. * Hypothesis 2b: The effect of CCVT+TAU compared to TAU alone will be mediated by increased use of outpatient behavioral health services in the CCVT+TAU condition.
Apparent increases in suicide attempts and death by suicide among active duty Service Members have gained considerable attention from the media, members of Congress, and the Department of Defense. Identifying and intervening with individuals thinking of suicide (as well as those engaging in suicidal behavior) is key to preventing suicide in Service Members. Intervention through caring contacts (e.g., letters, phone calls) have efficacy showing they may be an important adjunct or alternative to outpatient care. Caring contact interventions have been shown in previous studies to decrease suicidal ideation and attempts and initial pilot data have shown positive results in military populations. Text messaging, a low-cost means of sending brief messages (160 characters) to any owner of a mobile phone, has been investigated as an intervention for improving attendance to medical appointments and adherence to treatment in medical populations. As our current military population is a young, mobile, and increasingly technologically savvy population, and with the growing support behind text messaging as a feasible and effective mode of behavioral intervention, the pairing of text messaging and caring contact interventions warrants further research. The investigators plan to randomize 800 participating Service Members to one of the two treatment conditions (i.e., CCVT+TAU or TAU alone) to test the efficacy of this intervention. Measured endpoints will include suicide risk incident requiring medical evacuation or hospitalization, suicidal ideation as identified by the follow-up assessment battery, "thwarted belongingness" as identified by The Interpersonal Needs Questionnaire, outpatient behavioral health care utilization, and death.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
658
This is standard outpatient mental health care that is routinely provided in study site outpatient clinics.
Participants in the CCVT + TAU condition will receive caring texts at 1 day, 1 week, 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 8, 10, \& 12 months, and on their birthday. Text messages will indicate a general concern for the individual and a link to a website with general resources including behavioral health and crisis services. Participants in both conditions will continue to receive usual behavioral health care according to standard operating procedures.
Marine Corps Air Ground Combat Center Twentynine Palms
Twentynine Palms, California, United States
Womack Army Medical Center
Fort Bragg, North Carolina, United States
Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune
Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune, North Carolina, United States
Scale for Suicide Ideation - Current (SSI-C)
The SSI-C is an interviewer-administered scale that measures a Service Member's suicidal ideation at its worst point in the past 2 weeks.
Time frame: 12 months
Treatment History Interview (THI)
The THI captures the subject's treatment history. The investigators have modified a version to more appropriately capture the services Service Members are likely to receive, the Treatment History Interview - Military (THI-M). Primary outcome measured by the THI-M is suicide risk incidents (inpatient admission or medical evacuation to prevent suicide)
Time frame: 12 months
Suicide Attempt Self-Injury Count (SASI-Count)
The SASI-Count is an interviewer-administered brief instrument that creates a thumbnail sketch of a participant's history of self-directed violence (SDV) by assessing the first, most recent, and most severe acts of SDV during a specified time period, including the date, method, and suicidal intent of the act. This is followed by an assessment of SDV across 12 methods (e.g., cutting, hanging or strangling, firearm), generating counts by method and then classifying each act by suicidal intent (no, ambivalent, or clear intent). Across each method, the most lethal event is coded on a 1-6 scale in which "1" is "very low" (e.g., head banging) and "6" is "severe" (e.g., pulling the trigger of a loaded gun aimed at a vital area). A "Lifetime" version of the instrument was used at baseline, assessing all lifetime acts of SDV. A "Recent" version assessed SDV in the past year at baseline and at 12-month follow-up.
Time frame: 12 months
Scale for Suicide Ideation - Worst (SSI-W)
The SSI-W focused on worst-point ideation lifetime when administered at enrollment. At 12 months, the SSI-W captured worst-point ideation, if any, between baseline and follow-up. The SSI-W was added as an outcome after the first 35 cases completed follow-up upon learning it was becoming a standard in clinical trials using the SSI.
Time frame: 12 months
Interpersonal Needs Questionnaire (INQ)
The INQ, developed by Joiner and colleagues, will be used to measure beliefs about the extent to which individuals feel connected to others and feel like a burden on the people in their lives. Change in thwarted belongingness is being tested as a mediator of outcome.
Time frame: 12 months
Treatment History Interview (THI)
The THI captures the subject's treatment history. The investigators have modified a version to more appropriately capture the services Service Members are likely to receive, the Treatment History Interview - Military (THI-M). Secondary outcomes measured by the THI-M include outpatient behavioral health treatments received by participants and emergency department visits.
Time frame: 12 months
Client Satisfaction Questionnaire (CSQ)
The CSQ is a brief eight-item questionnaire, which is used frequently for evaluating standard community mental health care. The CSQ will help determine if the caring texts improve treatment satisfaction.
Time frame: 12 months
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