Teo Alan R, Andrea Sarah B, Sakakibara Rae, Motohara Satoko, Matthieu Monica M, Fetters Michael D
VA Portland Health Care System, Health Service Research & Development (HSR&D) Center to Improve Veteran Involvement in Care (CIVIC), 3710 SW US Veterans Hospital Rd (R&D 66), Portland, OR, 97239-2964, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Oregon Health & Science University, 3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Rd (Multnomah Pavilion, Room 2316), Portland, OR, 97239-3098, USA.
BMC Psychiatry. 2016 Jul 7;16:211. doi: 10.1186/s12888-016-0924-4.
Suicide is a critical public health problem around the globe. Asian populations are characterized by elevated suicide rates and a tendency to seek social support from family and friends over mental health professionals. Gatekeeper training programs have been developed to train frontline individuals in behaviors that assist at-risk individuals in obtaining mental health treatment. The purpose of this study is to assess the efficacy of a brief, multi-component gatekeeper intervention in promoting suicide prevention in a high-risk Asian community in the United States.
We adapted an evidence-based gatekeeper training into a two-hour, multi-modal and interactive event for Japanese-Americans and related stakeholders. Then we evaluated the intervention compared to an attention control using mixed methods.
A sample of 106 community members participated in the study. Intervention participants (n = 85) showed significant increases in all three types of intended gatekeeper behavior, all four measures of self-efficacy, and both measures of social norms relevant to suicide prevention, while the control group (n = 48) showed no significant improvements. Additional results showed significantly higher satisfaction and no adverse experiences associated with the gatekeeper training. The separate collection of qualitative data, and integration with the quantitative survey constructs confirmed and expanded understanding about the benefits of the intervention.
A brief, multi-modal gatekeeper training is efficacious in promoting positive gatekeeper behaviors and self-efficacy for suicide prevention in an at-risk ethnic minority population of Japanese Americans.
自杀是全球一个严重的公共卫生问题。亚洲人群的特点是自杀率较高,且倾向于从家人和朋友而非心理健康专业人员那里寻求社会支持。已制定守门人培训计划,以培训一线人员掌握有助于高危个体获得心理健康治疗的行为。本研究的目的是评估一种简短的、多成分的守门人干预措施在美国一个高危亚裔社区促进自杀预防方面的效果。
我们将基于证据的守门人培训改编成一个为时两小时、多模式且互动的活动,面向日裔美国人和相关利益攸关方。然后我们采用混合方法将该干预措施与一个注意力控制组进行比较评估。
106名社区成员参与了该研究。干预组参与者(n = 85)在所有三种类型的预期守门人行为、所有四项自我效能感指标以及与自杀预防相关的两项社会规范指标上均有显著提高,而对照组(n = 48)则无显著改善。其他结果显示,守门人培训的满意度显著更高且无不良体验。定性数据的单独收集以及与定量调查结构的整合,证实并拓展了对该干预措施益处的理解。
一种简短的、多模式的守门人培训在促进高危日裔美国少数族裔人群预防自杀的积极守门人行为和自我效能感方面是有效的。