1. The level of suicide ideation is correlated with al ow level of positive future expectencies 2. Our future oriented training will help people to predict a more positive future 3. And this will lead to less suicide ideation
ID
Bron
Verkorte titel
Ondersteuning
Onderzoeksproduct en/of interventie
Uitkomstmaten
Primaire uitkomstmaten
1. level of suicide ideations<br>
2. level of suicidal behaviour<br>
Achtergrond van het onderzoek
Research shows that hopelessness contributes to suicidality. Especially lack of positive future expectancies (as part of hopelessness) appears to be an important factor in developing suicidal ideations and behavior (MacLeod, Rose & Williams, 1993). Different forms of treatment for underlying mechanisms in suicidality have been developed and tested, but research in the United States (Kessler, Berglund, Borges, Nock Wang, 2005) showed that we can hardly observe consistent decrease in suicidal thoughts, plans, gestures or attempts after treatment. Suicidality on an individual level decreases after some forms of treatment, but the overall picture is not much different from that of two decades ago. Studying the effects of treatment is difficult, becasue suicide is rather unusual. Suicide has a low prevalence in the general population (0.01%), but suicide ideation is remarkably common (Gaynes, West, Ford, Frame, Klein & Lohr, 2004). We therefore choose to develop a program for this group of people. Suicide ideations precedes suicide most of the time and we expect this aspect to be better treatable and measurable, in an earlier stage of the suicidal process.
Our intervention consists of ten weekly group based training sessions of one and a half hour each. The central goals of the training are to help participants focus on a more positive future, to improve the skills needed to reach their personal goals and change their negative automatic thoughts and expectancies about their futures.
Our training method is based upon three major elements that have been discribed and investigated in research on suicidality and have been proven to be useful:
1. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (Brown, G.K., Ten Have, T., Henriques, G.R., Xie, S.X., Hollander, J.E. & Beck, A.T.,2005).
2. Problem Solving Therapy (D“Zurilla, 1986).
3. Future Directed Thinking (MacLeod, Tata, Tyrer, Schmidt, Davidson, & Thompson, 2004).
We will use additional material from Positive Psychology and Time Perspective theory (Zimbardo & Boyd, 1999).
Doel van het onderzoek
1. The level of suicide ideation is correlated with al ow level of positive future expectencies
2. Our future oriented training will help people to predict a more positive future
3. And this will lead to less suicide ideation
Onderzoeksproduct en/of interventie
We developed a manual-based group training, including elements from:
1. motivational interviewing
2. cognitive behavioural therapy
3. problem solving treatment
4. future thinking
5. positive psychology
We compare three groups:
1. treatment as usual
2. TAU + experimental training
3. non suicidal control group
Algemeen / deelnemers
Wetenschappers
Belangrijkste voorwaarden om deel te mogen nemen (Inclusiecriteria)
1. suicide ideation (BDI-II, question 9>0)
2. lifetime affective disorder
Belangrijkste redenen om niet deel te kunnen nemen (Exclusiecriteria)
1. primairy psychotic disorder
2. primairy substance abuse disorder
3. current manic state
4. inability to read or write Dutch
5. IQ<85
Opzet
Deelname
Opgevolgd door onderstaande (mogelijk meer actuele) registratie
Geen registraties gevonden.
Andere (mogelijk minder actuele) registraties in dit register
Geen registraties gevonden.
In overige registers
Register | ID |
---|---|
NTR-new | NL775 |
NTR-old | NTR786 |
Ander register | : N/A |
ISRCTN | ISRCTN56421759 |