Evidence suggests that 90% of adolescents with suicidal intentions give clear signals of their intent to others. Considering the large amount of time adolescents spend interacting with peers and school staff, school is the logical setting for prevention. In fact, over 25% of teachers surveyed indicate that they have been approached by teens at risk for suicide, yet only 1 teacher in 9 feels confident about identifying an at-risk student. Recognizing the importance of suicide-prevention efforts, 75% of all high schools in the U.S. require suicide prevention education. The key to prevention is to equip those who spend time with adolescents, such as school staff, parents and peers, to identify warning signs, connect helpfully with the distressed teen, and provide appropriate referral. Current school-based youth suicide prevention gatekeeper programs lack effective skill-building components and provide no mechanism for practice and maintenance of knowledge and skills. The central aim of this proposed project is to address deficiencies in current training programs by developing and evaluating an online youth suicide prevention program that complements and improves existing programs. The proposed program will provide school staff, parents and students with an easily accessed training resource targeted to their needs, including interactive multimedia, streaming-video situational vignettes, interactive-web exercises, self-assessments, and an expert-moderated online community room with discussions on key topics. This system of instructionally sound activities will foster proficiency in the 3 key intervention practices (i.e., identify, connect with, and refer). In Phase I, we will develop and evaluate an online training module for school staff. To assess the acceptability, feasibility, and effectiveness of the online training program we will employ a 2-panel, pre-and post-training design with 40 school staff. The formative information gathered during the trial phase will be used for product improvement and refinement in Phase II. During Phase II, a large randomized controlled trial will be used to compare standard gatekeeper training to gatekeeper training complemented by the proposed online skills-training program. Project Narrative: Youth suicide is a public health crisis, ranking third as overall cause of death among teenagers. Since 1960, the incidence of youth suicide has increased by 300%. This project addresses expert consensus that we must take immediate action to interrupt this crisis. ? ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD)
Type
Small Business Innovation Research Grants (SBIR) - Phase I (R43)
Project #
1R43HD049197-01A2
Application #
7158374
Study Section
Special Emphasis Panel (ZRG1-RPHB-C (11))
Program Officer
Haverkos, Lynne
Project Start
2006-09-20
Project End
2008-03-19
Budget Start
2006-09-20
Budget End
2008-03-19
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2006
Total Cost
$182,697
Indirect Cost
Name
Iris Media, Inc.
Department
Type
DUNS #
072307593
City
Eugene
State
OR
Country
United States
Zip Code
97401