A Randomized Controlled Trial to Assess Feasibility and Acceptability of Telephone-Based Psychosocial Interventions in Individuals who Attempted Suicide

Background: Brief contact interventions such as telephone-based contacts appear to be useful in individuals who attempted suicide. Most studies of telephone-based contacts in such individuals typically consisted of frequent phone reminders for adherence to treatment and seeking help for mental healt...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Priya Sreedaran, Ram Pratap Beniwal, Uttara Chari, Smitha T S, Vidhya Shree S V, Varsha Gupta, Triptish Bhatia, Smita N Deshpande
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-03-01
Series:Indian Journal of Psychological Medicine
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/0253717620939272
id doaj-4c5817d5572b4ebe823d1b330b4891e8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-4c5817d5572b4ebe823d1b330b4891e82021-08-09T08:04:55ZengSAGE PublishingIndian Journal of Psychological Medicine0253-71760975-15642021-03-014310.1177/0253717620939272A Randomized Controlled Trial to Assess Feasibility and Acceptability of Telephone-Based Psychosocial Interventions in Individuals who Attempted SuicidePriya Sreedaran0Ram Pratap Beniwal1Uttara Chari2 Smitha T S3 Vidhya Shree S V4Varsha Gupta5Triptish Bhatia6Smita N Deshpande7 Dept. of Psychiatry, St John’s Medical College, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India. Dept. of Psychiatry, Centre of Excellence in Mental Health, ABVIMS & Dr RML Hospital, New Delhi, India. Dept. of Clinical Psychology, St John’s MEDICAL college, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India. Dept. of Psychiatry, St John’s Medical College, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India. Dept. of Psychiatry, St John’s Medical College, Bengaluru, Karnataka, India. Dept. of Psychiatry, Centre of Excellence in Mental Health, ABVIMS & Dr RML Hospital, New Delhi, India. Dept. of Psychiatry, Centre of Excellence in Mental Health, ABVIMS & Dr RML Hospital, New Delhi, India. Dept. of Psychiatry, Centre of Excellence in Mental Health, ABVIMS & Dr RML Hospital, New Delhi, India.Background: Brief contact interventions such as telephone-based contacts appear to be useful in individuals who attempted suicide. Most studies of telephone-based contacts in such individuals typically consisted of frequent phone reminders for adherence to treatment and seeking help for mental health issues. Telephone-based psychosocial interventions that incorporate elements of supportive and problem-solving strategies are of interest in Indian settings due to their potential application in mitigating the wide mental health gap. Feasibility studies of telephone-based psychosocial interventions could help ascertain the difficulties that arise in the implementation of such treatments. Methods: A multicentric randomized controlled trial (RCT) is currently underway in general hospital settings in two Indian cities to study the efficacy of telephone-based psychosocial interventions in individuals with a recent suicide attempt, with routine telephone contacts (TCs) serving as the comparator. Prior to that RCT, this feasibility study was conducted to assess the acceptability of the telephone-based intervention and telephone contacts. Feasibility was assessed using dropout rates. Acceptability was assessed using participant-rated Likert-based visual analog scores from 0 to 10, with higher scores indicating greater acceptability. Results: Dropout rates and mean acceptability scores for telephone-based psychosocial interventions were 38.5% and 8.63, while those for TCs were 41.7% and 7.57, respectively. Conclusions: Telephone-based psychosocial interventions are feasible and acceptable in individuals with a recent suicide attempt.https://doi.org/10.1177/0253717620939272
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Priya Sreedaran
Ram Pratap Beniwal
Uttara Chari
Smitha T S
Vidhya Shree S V
Varsha Gupta
Triptish Bhatia
Smita N Deshpande
spellingShingle Priya Sreedaran
Ram Pratap Beniwal
Uttara Chari
Smitha T S
Vidhya Shree S V
Varsha Gupta
Triptish Bhatia
Smita N Deshpande
A Randomized Controlled Trial to Assess Feasibility and Acceptability of Telephone-Based Psychosocial Interventions in Individuals who Attempted Suicide
Indian Journal of Psychological Medicine
author_facet Priya Sreedaran
Ram Pratap Beniwal
Uttara Chari
Smitha T S
Vidhya Shree S V
Varsha Gupta
Triptish Bhatia
Smita N Deshpande
author_sort Priya Sreedaran
title A Randomized Controlled Trial to Assess Feasibility and Acceptability of Telephone-Based Psychosocial Interventions in Individuals who Attempted Suicide
title_short A Randomized Controlled Trial to Assess Feasibility and Acceptability of Telephone-Based Psychosocial Interventions in Individuals who Attempted Suicide
title_full A Randomized Controlled Trial to Assess Feasibility and Acceptability of Telephone-Based Psychosocial Interventions in Individuals who Attempted Suicide
title_fullStr A Randomized Controlled Trial to Assess Feasibility and Acceptability of Telephone-Based Psychosocial Interventions in Individuals who Attempted Suicide
title_full_unstemmed A Randomized Controlled Trial to Assess Feasibility and Acceptability of Telephone-Based Psychosocial Interventions in Individuals who Attempted Suicide
title_sort randomized controlled trial to assess feasibility and acceptability of telephone-based psychosocial interventions in individuals who attempted suicide
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Indian Journal of Psychological Medicine
issn 0253-7176
0975-1564
publishDate 2021-03-01
description Background: Brief contact interventions such as telephone-based contacts appear to be useful in individuals who attempted suicide. Most studies of telephone-based contacts in such individuals typically consisted of frequent phone reminders for adherence to treatment and seeking help for mental health issues. Telephone-based psychosocial interventions that incorporate elements of supportive and problem-solving strategies are of interest in Indian settings due to their potential application in mitigating the wide mental health gap. Feasibility studies of telephone-based psychosocial interventions could help ascertain the difficulties that arise in the implementation of such treatments. Methods: A multicentric randomized controlled trial (RCT) is currently underway in general hospital settings in two Indian cities to study the efficacy of telephone-based psychosocial interventions in individuals with a recent suicide attempt, with routine telephone contacts (TCs) serving as the comparator. Prior to that RCT, this feasibility study was conducted to assess the acceptability of the telephone-based intervention and telephone contacts. Feasibility was assessed using dropout rates. Acceptability was assessed using participant-rated Likert-based visual analog scores from 0 to 10, with higher scores indicating greater acceptability. Results: Dropout rates and mean acceptability scores for telephone-based psychosocial interventions were 38.5% and 8.63, while those for TCs were 41.7% and 7.57, respectively. Conclusions: Telephone-based psychosocial interventions are feasible and acceptable in individuals with a recent suicide attempt.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/0253717620939272
work_keys_str_mv AT priyasreedaran arandomizedcontrolledtrialtoassessfeasibilityandacceptabilityoftelephonebasedpsychosocialinterventionsinindividualswhoattemptedsuicide
AT rampratapbeniwal arandomizedcontrolledtrialtoassessfeasibilityandacceptabilityoftelephonebasedpsychosocialinterventionsinindividualswhoattemptedsuicide
AT uttarachari arandomizedcontrolledtrialtoassessfeasibilityandacceptabilityoftelephonebasedpsychosocialinterventionsinindividualswhoattemptedsuicide
AT smithats arandomizedcontrolledtrialtoassessfeasibilityandacceptabilityoftelephonebasedpsychosocialinterventionsinindividualswhoattemptedsuicide
AT vidhyashreesv arandomizedcontrolledtrialtoassessfeasibilityandacceptabilityoftelephonebasedpsychosocialinterventionsinindividualswhoattemptedsuicide
AT varshagupta arandomizedcontrolledtrialtoassessfeasibilityandacceptabilityoftelephonebasedpsychosocialinterventionsinindividualswhoattemptedsuicide
AT triptishbhatia arandomizedcontrolledtrialtoassessfeasibilityandacceptabilityoftelephonebasedpsychosocialinterventionsinindividualswhoattemptedsuicide
AT smitandeshpande arandomizedcontrolledtrialtoassessfeasibilityandacceptabilityoftelephonebasedpsychosocialinterventionsinindividualswhoattemptedsuicide
AT priyasreedaran randomizedcontrolledtrialtoassessfeasibilityandacceptabilityoftelephonebasedpsychosocialinterventionsinindividualswhoattemptedsuicide
AT rampratapbeniwal randomizedcontrolledtrialtoassessfeasibilityandacceptabilityoftelephonebasedpsychosocialinterventionsinindividualswhoattemptedsuicide
AT uttarachari randomizedcontrolledtrialtoassessfeasibilityandacceptabilityoftelephonebasedpsychosocialinterventionsinindividualswhoattemptedsuicide
AT smithats randomizedcontrolledtrialtoassessfeasibilityandacceptabilityoftelephonebasedpsychosocialinterventionsinindividualswhoattemptedsuicide
AT vidhyashreesv randomizedcontrolledtrialtoassessfeasibilityandacceptabilityoftelephonebasedpsychosocialinterventionsinindividualswhoattemptedsuicide
AT varshagupta randomizedcontrolledtrialtoassessfeasibilityandacceptabilityoftelephonebasedpsychosocialinterventionsinindividualswhoattemptedsuicide
AT triptishbhatia randomizedcontrolledtrialtoassessfeasibilityandacceptabilityoftelephonebasedpsychosocialinterventionsinindividualswhoattemptedsuicide
AT smitandeshpande randomizedcontrolledtrialtoassessfeasibilityandacceptabilityoftelephonebasedpsychosocialinterventionsinindividualswhoattemptedsuicide
_version_ 1721214964823228416