[F31] Developing a Measure to Characterize Suicide-Related Disclosure Processes in Adolescents and Caregivers
Ente: National Institute of Mental Health
Scadenza: 2028-06-30
Importo max: 49.538 EUR
Paese: US
Descrizione
PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT
Current estimates hold that only 50% of individuals who die by suicide disclose their suicidal thoughts to anybody
before death, making detection of high-risk individuals challenging. However, past research has only assessed
direct forms of disclosure (i.e., explicitly telling somebody about thoughts of suicide), and may not capture
indirect disclosure, whereby disclosure occurs euphemistically or vaguely (e.g., “I’m worried I might do
something stupid”). Evidence has shown that indirect disclosure may serve as a proximal risk factor for suicide,
indicating its importance as a potential point of intervention. However, indirect disclosure has not been previously
characterized in the literature, and its prevalence is unknown. Most critically, no standardized assessment tool
exists to detect or characterize indirect suicide-related disclosure. The field’s limited understanding of suicide-
related disclosure critically limits clinicians’ and loved ones’ ability to detect risk, meaning that vital “cries for help”
may go unnoticed and opportunities for prevention missed. The proposed project will refine and pilot a multi-
informant, self-report measure to dyadically characterize direct and indirect suicide-related disclosure
in adolescents and their caregivers. Adolescents and their caregivers will be recruited from a psychiatric
inpatient unit on the basis of a recent suicidal crisis. Parent-adolescent dyads will complete qualitative interviews
assessing disclosure in the period preceding the suicidal crisis, providing information about the content, function,
and consequences of disclosure as well as caregivers’ detection of disclosure and response to it. Participants
will also provide feedback on a preliminary, multi-informant measure characterizing disclosure processes. The
measure will be revised in response to participant feedback and piloted in a new sample of parent-adolescent
dyads, who will also complete one month of ecological momentary assessment probing family support. Analyses
will test whether disclosure predicts improvements in family support over time, and whether this effect is
moderated by parents’ detection of an adolescent’s disclosure. Results may ultimately inform interventions to
both promote more adaptive help-seeking in suicidal adolescents, and to train caregivers to respond
appropriately. A training plan has been developed that consists of coursework and mentorship in qualitative
research methods, research conduct with suicidal individuals, measure development, and statistics for intensive
longitudinal methods to build the applicant’s expertise in carrying out research in suicidal populations.
Istituzione: RUTGERS, THE STATE UNIV OF N.J.
PI: alma bitran
Progetto: 1F31MH143440-01
Settori: National Institute of Mental Health
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