Innovations in suicide prevention research (INSPIRE): a protocol for a population-based case–control study

Author:

Ranapurwala Shabbar IORCID,Miller Vanessa E,Carey Timothy S,Gaynes Bradley N,Keil Alexander P,Fitch Kate VinitaORCID,Swilley-Martinez Monica E,Kavee Andrew L,Cooper Toska,Dorris Samantha,Goldston David B,Peiper Lewis JORCID,Pence Brian W

Abstract

BackgroundSuicide deaths have been increasing for the past 20 years in the USA resulting in 45 979 deaths in 2020, a 29% increase since 1999. Lack of data linkage between entities with potential to implement large suicide prevention initiatives (health insurers, health institutions and corrections) is a barrier to developing an integrated framework for suicide prevention.ObjectivesData linkage between death records and several large administrative datasets to (1) estimate associations between risk factors and suicide outcomes, (2) develop predictive algorithms and (3) establish long-term data linkage workflow to ensure ongoing suicide surveillance.MethodsWe will combine six data sources from North Carolina, the 10th most populous state in the USA, from 2006 onward, including death certificate records, violent deaths reporting system, large private health insurance claims data, Medicaid claims data, University of North Carolina electronic health records and data on justice involved individuals released from incarceration. We will determine the incidence of death from suicide, suicide attempts and ideation in the four subpopulations to establish benchmarks. We will use a nested case–control design with incidence density-matched population-based controls to (1) identify short-term and long-term risk factors associated with suicide attempts and mortality and (2) develop machine learning-based predictive algorithms to identify individuals at risk of suicide deaths.DiscussionWe will address gaps from prior studies by establishing an in-depth linked suicide surveillance system integrating multiple large, comprehensive databases that permit establishment of benchmarks, identification of predictors, evaluation of prevention efforts and establishment of long-term surveillance workflow protocols.

Funder

National Institute of Mental Health

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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