Sharma Vartika, Marshall David, Fortune Sarah, Prescott Annabelle E, Boggiss Anna, Macleod Emily, Mitchell Claire, Clarke Alison, Robinson Jo, Witt Katrina G, Hawton Keith, Hetrick Sarah E
Department of Social and Community Health, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2024 Dec 20;12(12):CD013844. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD013844.pub2.
In 2016, globally, suicide was the second leading cause of death amongst those aged 15 to 29 years. Self-harm is increasingly common among young people in many countries, particularly among women and girls. The risk of suicide is elevated 30-fold in the year following hospital presentation for self-harm, and those with suicidal ideation have double the risk of suicide compared with the general population. Self-harm and suicide in young people are significant public health issues that cause distress for young people, their peers, and family, and lead to substantial healthcare costs. Educational settings are widely acknowledged as a logical and appropriate place to provide prevention and treatment. A comprehensive, high-quality systematic review of self-harm and suicide prevention programmes in all education settings is thus urgently required. This will support evidence-informed decision making to facilitate rational investment in prevention efforts in educational settings. Suicide and self-harm are distressing, and we acknowledge that the content of this review is sensitive as the data outlined below represents the lived and living experience of suicidal distress for individuals and their caregivers.
To assess the effects of interventions delivered in educational settings to prevent or address self-harm and suicidal ideation in young people (up to the age of 25) and examine whether the relative effects on self-harm and suicide are modified by education setting.
We searched the Cochrane Common Mental Disorders Specialised Register, CENTRAL, The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Ovid MEDLINE, PsycINFO, ERIC, Web of Science Social Science Citation Index, EBSCO host Australian Education Index, British Education Index, Educational Research Abstracts to 28 April 2023.
We included trials where the primary aim was to evaluate an intervention specifically designed to reduce self-harm or prevent suicide in an education setting. Randomised controlled trials (RCTs), cluster-RCTs, cross-over trials and quasi-randomised trials were eligible for inclusion. Primary outcomes were self-harm postintervention and acceptability; secondary outcomes included suicidal ideation, hopelessness, and two outcomes co-designed with young people: better or more coping skills, and a safe environment, with more acceptance and understanding.
We used standard methodological procedures as expected by Cochrane. Two review authors independently selected studies, extracted data, and assessed risk of bias. We analysed dichotomous data as odds ratios (ORs) and continuous data as standardised mean differences (SMDs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs). We conducted random-effects meta-analyses and assessed certainty of evidence using the GRADE approach. For co-designed outcomes, we used vote counting based on the direction of effect, as there is a huge variation in the data and the effect measure used in the included studies.
We included 51 trials involving 36,414 participants (minimum 23; maximum 11,100). Twenty-seven studies were conducted in secondary schools, one in middle school, one in primary school, 19 in universities, one in medical school, and one across education and community settings. Eighteen trials investigated universal interventions, 11 of which provided data for at least one meta-analysis, but no trials provided data for self-harm postintervention. Evidence on the acceptability of universal interventions is of very low certainty, and indicates little or no difference between groups (OR 0.77, 95% CI 0.36 to 1.67; 9 studies, 8528 participants). Low-certainty evidence showed little to no effect on suicidal ideation (SMD -0.02, 95% CI -0.23 to 0.20; 4 studies, 379 participants) nor on hopelessness (MD -0.01, 95% CI -1.98 to 1.96; 1 trial, 121 participants). Fifteen trials investigated selective interventions, eight of which provided data for at least one meta-analysis, but only one trial provided data for self-harm postintervention. Low-certainty evidence indicates that selective interventions may reduce self-harm postintervention slightly (OR 0.39, 95% CI 0.06 to 2.43; 1 trial, 148 participants). While no trial provided data for hopelessness, little to no effect was found on acceptability (OR 1.00, 95% CI 0.5 to 2.0; 6 studies, 10,208 participants; very low-certainty evidence) or suicidal ideation (SMD 0.04, 95% CI -0.36 to 0.43; 2 studies, 102 participants; low-certainty evidence). Seventeen trials investigated indicated interventions, 14 of which provided data for at least one meta-analysis, but only four trials provided data for self-harm postintervention and two reported no events in both groups. Low-certainty evidence suggests that indicated interventions may slightly reduce self-harm postintervention (OR 0.19, 95% CI 0.02 to 1.76; 2 studies, 76 participants). There is also low-certainty evidence indicating that these interventions may decrease the odds of non-suicidal self-injury (OR 0.65, 95% CI 0.24 to 1.79; 2 studies, 89 participants). Evidence of a slight decrease in acceptability in the intervention group is of low certainty (OR 1.44, 95% CI 0.86 to 2.42; 10 studies, 641 participants). Low-certainty evidence shows that indicated interventions may slightly reduce suicidal ideation (SMD -0.33, 95% CI -0.55 to -0.10; 10 studies, 685 participants) and may result in little to no difference in hopelessness postintervention (SMD -0.27, 95% CI -0.55 to 0.01; 6 studies, 455 participants). There were mixed findings regarding the effect of suicide prevention interventions on a range of constructs relevant to coping skills and safe environment. None of the trials, however, measured the impact of improvements in these constructs on self-harm or suicidal ideation.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: While this review provides an update on the evidence about interventions targeting self-harm and suicide prevention in education settings, there remains significant uncertainty about the impact of these interventions. There are some promising findings but large replication studies are needed, as are studies that examine the combination of different intervention approaches, and can be delivered in a safe environment and implemented over a long period of time. Further research is required to understand and measure outcomes that are meaningful to young people with lived experience, as they want coping skills and safety of the environment in which they conduct their everyday lives to be measured as key outcomes in future trials.
2016年,在全球范围内,自杀是15至29岁人群的第二大死因。自我伤害在许多国家的年轻人中越来越普遍,尤其是在女性和女孩中。因自我伤害住院后的一年内,自杀风险会升高30倍,有自杀意念的人自杀风险是普通人群的两倍。年轻人的自我伤害和自杀是重大的公共卫生问题,给年轻人及其同龄人、家庭带来痛苦,并导致大量医疗费用。教育环境被广泛认为是提供预防和治疗的合理且合适的场所。因此,迫切需要对所有教育环境中的自我伤害和自杀预防计划进行全面、高质量的系统评价。这将支持基于证据的决策,以便在教育环境中的预防工作中进行合理投资。自杀和自我伤害令人痛苦,我们承认本评价的内容很敏感,因为以下数据代表了个人及其照顾者的自杀痛苦经历。
评估在教育环境中实施的干预措施对预防或解决年轻人(25岁及以下)自我伤害和自杀意念的效果,并研究教育环境是否会改变对自我伤害和自杀的相对影响。
我们检索了Cochrane常见精神障碍专业注册库、CENTRAL、Cochrane系统评价数据库、Ovid MEDLINE、PsycINFO、ERIC、科学网社会科学引文索引、EBSCOhost澳大利亚教育索引、英国教育索引、教育研究摘要,检索截至2023年4月28日。
我们纳入了主要目的是评估专门设计用于减少教育环境中自我伤害或预防自杀的干预措施的试验。随机对照试验(RCT)、整群RCT、交叉试验和半随机试验均符合纳入标准。主要结局是干预后的自我伤害和可接受性;次要结局包括自杀意念、绝望感,以及与年轻人共同设计的两个结局:更好或更多的应对技能,以及一个更安全的环境,其中有更多的接纳和理解。
我们采用Cochrane预期的标准方法程序。两位评价作者独立选择研究、提取数据并评估偏倚风险。我们将二分数据分析为比值比(OR),将连续数据分析为标准化均数差(SMD),并给出95%置信区间(CI)。我们进行随机效应荟萃分析,并使用GRADE方法评估证据的确定性。对于共同设计的结局,我们根据效应方向进行投票计数,因为纳入研究中使用的数据和效应测量存在巨大差异。
我们纳入了51项试验,涉及36414名参与者(最少23名;最多11100名)。27项研究在中学进行,1项在初中进行,1项在小学进行,19项在大学进行,1项在医学院进行,1项在教育和社区环境中进行。18项试验调查了普遍性干预措施,其中11项提供了至少一项荟萃分析的数据,但没有试验提供干预后自我伤害的数据。关于普遍性干预措施可接受性的证据确定性非常低,表明各组之间几乎没有差异(OR 0.77,95%CI 0.36至1.67;9项研究,8528名参与者)。低确定性证据表明,对自杀意念几乎没有影响(SMD -0.02,95%CI -0.23至0.20;4项研究,379名参与者),对绝望感也几乎没有影响(MD -0.01,95%CI -1.98至1.96;1项试验,121名参与者)。15项试验调查了选择性干预措施,其中8项提供了至少一项荟萃分析的数据,但只有1项试验提供了干预后自我伤害的数据。低确定性证据表明,选择性干预措施可能会在一定程度上降低干预后的自我伤害(OR 0.39,95%CI 0.06至2.43;1项试验,148名参与者)。虽然没有试验提供绝望感的数据,但在可接受性方面几乎没有发现影响(OR 1.00,95%CI 0.5至2.0;6项研究,10208名参与者;极低确定性证据),对自杀意念也几乎没有影响(SMD 0.04,95%CI -0.36至0.43;2项研究,102名参与者;低确定性证据)。17项试验调查了针对性干预措施,其中14项提供了至少一项荟萃分析的数据,但只有4项试验提供了干预后自我伤害的数据,2项试验报告两组均无事件发生。低确定性证据表明,针对性干预措施可能会在一定程度上降低干预后的自我伤害(OR 0.19,95%CI 0.02至1.76;2项研究,76名参与者)。也有低确定性证据表明,这些干预措施可能会降低非自杀性自我伤害的几率(OR 0.65,95%CI 0.24至1.79;2项研究,89名参与者)。干预组可接受性略有下降的证据确定性较低(OR 1.44,95%CI 0.86至2.42;10项研究,641名参与者)。低确定性证据表明,针对性干预措施可能会在一定程度上降低自杀意念(SMD -0.33,95%CI -0.55至-0.10;10项研究,685名参与者),干预后绝望感可能几乎没有差异(SMD -0.27,95%CI -0.55至0.01;6项研究,455名参与者)。关于自杀预防干预措施对一系列与应对技能和安全环境相关的结构的影响,研究结果不一。然而,没有一项试验测量了这些结构的改善对自我伤害或自杀意念的影响。
虽然本评价提供了关于教育环境中针对自我伤害和自杀预防干预措施的证据更新,但这些干预措施的影响仍存在很大不确定性。有一些有前景的发现,但需要大型重复研究,以及研究不同干预方法组合的研究,并且这些研究要能在安全的环境中实施并长期开展。还需要进一步研究来理解和测量对有实际经历的年轻人有意义的结局,因为他们希望在未来的试验中将应对技能和日常生活环境的安全性作为关键结局进行测量。