Rasmus Stacy, D'Amico Elizabeth J, Allen James, Nation Cynthia, John Simeon, Joseph Victor, Rodriguez Anthony, Alvarado Gaby, Gittens Allyson D, Palimaru Alina I, Brown Ryan A, Kennedy David P, Woodward Michael J, Parker Jennifer, McDonald Keisha
University of Alaska Fairbanks.
RAND Corporation.
Res Sq. 2024 Jan 22:rs.3.rs-3874293. doi: 10.21203/rs.3.rs-3874293/v1.
Suicide among young people in Alaska Native (AN) communities was nearly unheard of through the establishment of statehood in 1959, but in the 1970s, AN suicide rates began to double every five years, with most of the increase due to suicide among 15 to 25-year-olds. From 1960-1995, the suicide rate increased by approximately 500% during this period of rapid, imposed social transition. For example, families were forced to live in settlements and children were sent to boarding schools. These disruptions increased conditions associated with suicide risk (e.g., substance use disorders, cultural disconnection), and challenged the community-level social safety net of youth protective factors that might have moderated effects of these traumas. The present study addresses the significant gap in culturally appropriate evidence-based programming to address suicide prevention among AN young people as part of aftercare. Our key research questions and methodology have been informed by AN stakeholders, and the intervention approach is Indigenous-led.
Our interventions are targeted toward Alaska Native young people ages 14-24 who present with suicide attempt, ideation, or associated risk behaviors, including alcohol-related injury in the Yukon-Kuskokwim region or the Interior. In a randomized controlled trial, 14-24-year-old AN individuals will receive either BeWeL (n = 185), which comprises a 45-minute virtual cultural talk addressing family and ancestral strengths and increasing protective factors, or BeWeL plus motivational interviewing with social networks, which includes an additional 15 minutes focused on discussion of the individual's social networks (n = 185). We will evaluate intervention effects on primary outcomes of suicide-intent risk, depression, anxiety, frequency of alcohol use, and alcohol consequences. Some of our secondary outcomes include individual and community protective factors, social networks, and awareness of connectedness.
This project has the potential to expand the range and effectiveness of suicide prevention services for AN young people and will help meet the need in Alaska to link clinical behavioral health services to AN community-based networks, and to engage local cultural resources in aftercare for individuals at risk for suicide. Findings have potential to provide practical information to advance the field of suicide prevention and enhance protective factors and resiliency among this population.
ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT05360888.
在阿拉斯加原住民(AN)社区,1959年该州成立后,年轻人自杀几乎闻所未闻,但在20世纪70年代,AN的自杀率开始每五年翻一番,大部分增长归因于15至25岁人群的自杀。从1960年到1995年,在这段快速的、强加的社会转型期内,自杀率增长了约500%。例如,家庭被迫居住在定居点,孩子被送去寄宿学校。这些破坏增加了与自杀风险相关的情况(如物质使用障碍、文化脱节),并挑战了可能减轻这些创伤影响的社区层面的青少年保护因素社会安全网。本研究旨在填补文化上合适的循证项目方面的重大空白,以作为后续护理的一部分,解决AN年轻人的自杀预防问题。我们的关键研究问题和方法是由AN利益相关者提供信息的,干预方法是由原住民主导的。
我们的干预措施针对14至24岁有自杀企图、自杀意念或相关风险行为的阿拉斯加原住民年轻人,包括育空-库斯科基姆地区或内陆地区与酒精相关的伤害。在一项随机对照试验中,14至24岁的AN个体将接受BeWeL干预(n = 185),该干预包括一个45分钟的虚拟文化讲座,讲述家庭和祖先的优势并增加保护因素,或者接受BeWeL加上对社交网络的动机性访谈,其中包括额外15分钟专注于讨论个体社交网络的内容(n = 185)。我们将评估干预对自杀意图风险、抑郁、焦虑、饮酒频率和酒精后果等主要结果的影响。我们的一些次要结果包括个体和社区保护因素、社交网络以及关联意识。
该项目有可能扩大针对AN年轻人的自杀预防服务的范围和效果,并将有助于满足阿拉斯加将临床行为健康服务与AN社区网络联系起来的需求,并让当地文化资源参与到对有自杀风险个体的后续护理中。研究结果有可能提供实用信息,以推动自杀预防领域的发展,并增强该人群的保护因素和恢复力。
ClinicalTrials.gov标识符:NCT05360888。