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Accepted for/Published in: Journal of Participatory Medicine

Date Submitted: Jan 9, 2024
Date Accepted: Mar 15, 2024

The final, peer-reviewed published version of this preprint can be found here:

Suicide Prevention by Peers Offering Recovery Tactics (SUPPORT) for US Veterans With Serious Mental Illness: Community Engagement Approach

Chalker SA, Serafez J, Imai Y, Stinchcomb J, Mendez E, Depp CA, Twamley EW, Fortuna KL, Goodman M, Chinman M

Suicide Prevention by Peers Offering Recovery Tactics (SUPPORT) for US Veterans With Serious Mental Illness: Community Engagement Approach

J Particip Med 2024;16:e56204

DOI: 10.2196/56204

PMID: 38781010

PMCID: 11157181

SUicide Prevention by Peers Offering Recovery Tactics (SUPPORT): Including Lived Experience Voices to Develop a Peer Specialist-Delivered Suicide Prevention Program for U.S. Veterans with Serious Mental Illness

  • Samantha A. Chalker; 
  • Jesus Serafez; 
  • Yuki Imai; 
  • Jeffrey Stinchcomb; 
  • Estefany Mendez; 
  • Colin A. Depp; 
  • Elizabeth W. Twamley; 
  • Karen L. Fortuna; 
  • Marianne Goodman; 
  • Matthew Chinman

ABSTRACT

Background:

Peer specialists are hired, trained, and accredited to share their lived experience of psychiatric illness to support other similar individuals through the recovery process. There is limited data on the role of peer specialists in suicide prevention, including their role in intervention development.

Objective:

To better understand peer specialists within the Veterans Health Administration (VHA), we followed partnership community engagement and a formative research approach to intervention development to a) identify barriers, facilitators, and perceptions of VHA peer specialists delivering a suicide prevention service and b) develop and refine an intervention curriculum based on an evidenced-informed preliminary intervention framework for veterans with serious mental illness (SMI).

Methods:

Following the community engagement approach, VHA local and national peer support and mental health leaders, veterans with SMI, and veteran peer specialists met to develop a preliminary intervention framework. Next, VHA peer specialist advisors (n=5) and scientific advisors (n=6) participated in respective advisory boards and met regularly (i.e., 2-4 months over 18 months via videoconferencing) to address study objectives. The process utilized was a reflexive thematic analysis after each advisory board meeting.

Results:

The themes discussed included a) the desire for suicide prevention training for peer specialists, b) determining the role of VHA peer specialists in suicide prevention, c) integration of recovery themes in suicide prevention, and d) difficulties using safety plans during a crisis. There were no discrepancies in thematic content between advisory boards. Advisor input led to the development of SUicide Prevention by Peers Offering Recovery Tactics (SUPPORT). SUPPORT includes training in general suicide prevention and a peer specialist-delivered intervention (SUPPORT Plan) for veterans at increased suicide risk with SMI. This training aims to increase the competence and confidence of peer specialists in suicide prevention and support veterans with SMI at increased suicide risk through their recovery process.

Conclusions:

This paper intends to document the procedures taken in suicide prevention intervention development, specifically those led by peer specialists, and to be a source for future research developing and evaluating similar interventions. Clinical Trial: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT05537376.


 Citation

Please cite as:

Chalker SA, Serafez J, Imai Y, Stinchcomb J, Mendez E, Depp CA, Twamley EW, Fortuna KL, Goodman M, Chinman M

Suicide Prevention by Peers Offering Recovery Tactics (SUPPORT) for US Veterans With Serious Mental Illness: Community Engagement Approach

J Particip Med 2024;16:e56204

DOI: 10.2196/56204

PMID: 38781010

PMCID: 11157181

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