Leveraging behavioral economics and implementation science to engage patients at risk for suicide in mental health treatment: a pilot study protocol

Author:

Khazanov Gabriela KattanORCID,Jager-Hyman Shari,Harrison Joseph,Candon Molly,Buttenheim Alison,Pieri Matteo F.,Oslin David W.,Wolk Courtney Benjamin

Abstract

Abstract Background Primary care is an ideal setting to connect individuals at risk for suicide to follow-up care; however, only half of the patients referred from the primary care attend an initial mental health visit. We aim to develop acceptable, feasible, low-cost, and effective new strategies to increase treatment initiation among at-risk individuals identified in primary care. Methods We will conduct a multi-phase, mixed-methods study. First, we will conduct a chart review study by using administrative data, including medical records, to identify characteristics of primary care patients at risk for suicide who do or do not attend an initial mental health visit following a referral. Second, we will conduct a mixed methods study by using direct observations and qualitative interviews with key stakeholders (N = 65) to understand barriers and facilitators to mental health service initiation among at-risk individuals. Stakeholders will include patients with suicidal ideation referred from primary care who do and do not attend a first mental health visit, primary care and behavioral health providers, and individuals involved in the referral process. We also will collect preliminary self-report and behavioral data regarding potential mechanisms of behavior change (i.e., self-regulation and social support) from patients. Third, we will leverage these findings, relevant frameworks, and the extant literature to conduct a multi-arm, non-randomized feasibility trial. During this trial, we will rapidly prototype and test strategies to support attendance at initial mental health visits. Strategies will be developed with subject matter experts (N = 10) and iteratively pilot tested (~5 patients per strategy) and refined. Research will be completed in the Penn Integrated Care Program (PIC), which includes fourteen primary care clinics in Philadelphia that provide infrastructure for electronic referrals, patient communication, and data access. Discussion We will leverage frameworks and methods from behavioral economics and implementation science to develop strategies to increase mental health treatment initiation among individuals at risk for suicide identified in primary care. This project will lead to an evaluation of these strategies in a fully powered randomized trial and contribute to improvements in access to and engagement in mental health services for individuals at risk for suicide. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05021224

Funder

Foundation for the National Institutes of Health

Office of Academic Affiliations, Department of Veterans Affairs

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Medicine (miscellaneous)

Reference61 articles.

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2. American Association of Suicidology. U.S.A. Suicide 2017: official final data. 2018. www.suicidology.org. Accessed 10 Dec 2018.

3. Shepard DS, Gurewich D, Lwin AK, Reed GA Jr, Silverman MM. Suicide and suicidal attempts in the United States: costs and policy implications. Suicide Life Threat Behav. 2016;46(3):352–62.

4. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS) [online]. 2005; http://www.cdc.gov/ncipc/wisqars.

5. Alonzo D, Moravec C, Kaufman B. Individuals at risk for suicide: mental health clinicians’ perspectives on barriers to and facilitators of treatment engagement. Crisis. 2017;38(3):158–67.

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