School of Psychology, Institute for Mental Health, University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK
Orygen The National Centre of Excellence in Youth Mental Health, Parkville, Victoria, Australia.
BMJ Open. 2023 Aug 14;13(8):e071111. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-071111.
Suicide is a leading cause of mortality among young people aged 15-24 globally. Despite the deployment of comprehensive suicide prevention strategies, we still do not know which interventions, for which groups of young people, for how long and with what intensity could generate the most significant reductions in suicide rates. System dynamics modelling has the potential to address these gaps. SEYMOUR (System Dynamics Modelling for Suicide Prevention) will develop and evaluate a system dynamics model that will indicate which suicide prevention interventions could generate the most significant reductions in rates of suicide and attempted suicide among young people aged 12-25 in Australia and the UK.
A comparative case study design, applying participatory system dynamics modelling in North-West Melbourne (Australia) and Birmingham (UK). A computer simulation model of mental health service pathways and suicidal behaviour among young people in North-West Melbourne will be developed through three workshops with expert stakeholder groups (young people with lived experience, carers, clinicians, policy makers, commissioners). The model will be calibrated and validated using national, state and local datasets (inputs). The simulation model will test a series of interventions identified in the workshops for inclusion. Primary model outputs include suicide deaths, self-harm hospitalisations and self-harm presentations to emergency departments. An implementation strategy for the sustainable embedding of promising suicide prevention interventions will be developed. This will be followed by model customisation, re-parameterisation, and validation in Birmingham and adaptation of the implementation strategy.
The project has received approval from the University of Melbourne Human Research Ethics Committee (2022-22885-25971-4), the University of Birmingham Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics Ethics Review Committee (ERN_21-02385) and the UK HRA (22/HRA/3826). SEYMOUR's dissemination strategy includes open-access academic publications, conference presentations, accessible findings coproduced with young people, e-briefs to policy makers, webinars for service providers and commissioners.
自杀是全球 15-24 岁年轻人死亡的主要原因。尽管已经部署了全面的自杀预防策略,但我们仍不知道哪些干预措施、针对哪些年轻人群体、持续多长时间以及以何种强度可以最大程度地降低自杀率。系统动力学建模具有解决这些差距的潜力。SEYMOUR(自杀预防系统动力学建模)将开发和评估一个系统动力学模型,该模型将指出哪些自杀预防干预措施可以最大程度地降低澳大利亚和英国 12-25 岁年轻人的自杀和企图自杀率。
比较案例研究设计,在澳大利亚的西北墨尔本和英国的伯明翰应用参与式系统动力学建模。通过与专家利益相关者群体(有生活经验的年轻人、照顾者、临床医生、政策制定者、决策者)进行三次研讨会,将开发一个针对西北墨尔本年轻人心理健康服务途径和自杀行为的计算机模拟模型。将使用国家、州和地方数据集(投入)对模型进行校准和验证。模拟模型将测试研讨会中确定的一系列干预措施。主要模型输出包括自杀死亡、自残住院和自残到急诊部就诊。将制定一项可持续实施有前途的自杀预防干预措施的实施策略。之后将在伯明翰对模型进行定制、重新参数化和验证,并调整实施策略。
该项目已获得墨尔本大学人类研究伦理委员会(2022-22885-25971-4)、伯明翰大学科学、技术、工程和数学伦理审查委员会(ERN_21-02385)和英国 HRA(22/HRA/3826)的批准。SEYMOUR 的传播策略包括开放获取的学术出版物、会议演讲、与年轻人共同制作的易于理解的研究结果、政策制定者的电子简报、服务提供者和决策者的网络研讨会。