The Role of Technology and the Continuum of Care for Youth Suicidality: Systematic Review

BackgroundYouth suicide is a global public health issue, and using technology is one strategy to increase participation in preventive interventions. However, there is minimal knowledge on how technology-enhanced interventions for youth correspond to the stages of care, from i...

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Main Authors: Szlyk, Hannah, Tan, Jia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: JMIR Publications 2020-10-01
Series:Journal of Medical Internet Research
Online Access:http://www.jmir.org/2020/10/e18672/
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spelling doaj-6e1076e37fbf421eb7262f0f57368bd22021-04-02T18:55:55ZengJMIR PublicationsJournal of Medical Internet Research1438-88712020-10-012210e1867210.2196/18672The Role of Technology and the Continuum of Care for Youth Suicidality: Systematic ReviewSzlyk, HannahTan, Jia BackgroundYouth suicide is a global public health issue, and using technology is one strategy to increase participation in preventive interventions. However, there is minimal knowledge on how technology-enhanced interventions for youth correspond to the stages of care, from illness or risk recognition to treatment follow-up. ObjectiveThis systematic review aims to examine the efficacy of technology-enhanced youth suicide prevention and interventions across the continuum of care. MethodsFour electronic databases were searched up to spring 2019 for youth suicide preventive interventions that used technology. The review was not restricted by study design and eligible studies could report outcomes on suicidality or related behaviors, such as formal treatment initiation. An adapted version of the Methodological Quality Ratings Scale was used to assess study quality. ResultsA total of 26 studies were identified. The findings support the emerging efficacy of technology-enhanced interventions, including a decline in suicidality and an increase in proactive behaviors. However, evidence suggests that there are gaps in the continuum of care and recent study samples do not represent the diverse identities of vulnerable youth. ConclusionsThe majority of identified studies were conducted in school settings and were universal interventions that aligned with the illness and risk recognition and help-seeking stages of the continuum of care. This field could be strengthened by having future studies target the stages of assessment and treatment initiation, include diverse youth demographics, and examine the varying roles of providers and technological components in emerging interventions.http://www.jmir.org/2020/10/e18672/
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Szlyk, Hannah
Tan, Jia
spellingShingle Szlyk, Hannah
Tan, Jia
The Role of Technology and the Continuum of Care for Youth Suicidality: Systematic Review
Journal of Medical Internet Research
author_facet Szlyk, Hannah
Tan, Jia
author_sort Szlyk, Hannah
title The Role of Technology and the Continuum of Care for Youth Suicidality: Systematic Review
title_short The Role of Technology and the Continuum of Care for Youth Suicidality: Systematic Review
title_full The Role of Technology and the Continuum of Care for Youth Suicidality: Systematic Review
title_fullStr The Role of Technology and the Continuum of Care for Youth Suicidality: Systematic Review
title_full_unstemmed The Role of Technology and the Continuum of Care for Youth Suicidality: Systematic Review
title_sort role of technology and the continuum of care for youth suicidality: systematic review
publisher JMIR Publications
series Journal of Medical Internet Research
issn 1438-8871
publishDate 2020-10-01
description BackgroundYouth suicide is a global public health issue, and using technology is one strategy to increase participation in preventive interventions. However, there is minimal knowledge on how technology-enhanced interventions for youth correspond to the stages of care, from illness or risk recognition to treatment follow-up. ObjectiveThis systematic review aims to examine the efficacy of technology-enhanced youth suicide prevention and interventions across the continuum of care. MethodsFour electronic databases were searched up to spring 2019 for youth suicide preventive interventions that used technology. The review was not restricted by study design and eligible studies could report outcomes on suicidality or related behaviors, such as formal treatment initiation. An adapted version of the Methodological Quality Ratings Scale was used to assess study quality. ResultsA total of 26 studies were identified. The findings support the emerging efficacy of technology-enhanced interventions, including a decline in suicidality and an increase in proactive behaviors. However, evidence suggests that there are gaps in the continuum of care and recent study samples do not represent the diverse identities of vulnerable youth. ConclusionsThe majority of identified studies were conducted in school settings and were universal interventions that aligned with the illness and risk recognition and help-seeking stages of the continuum of care. This field could be strengthened by having future studies target the stages of assessment and treatment initiation, include diverse youth demographics, and examine the varying roles of providers and technological components in emerging interventions.
url http://www.jmir.org/2020/10/e18672/
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