184
Participants
Start Date
November 9, 2023
Primary Completion Date
December 31, 2027
Study Completion Date
January 31, 2028
CAMS Single Session Consultation
CAMS is a clinical intervention designed to modify how clinicians engage, assess and plan treatment with suicidal patients. The foundational brief intervention that all participants will receive includes 1 90-minute session of CAMS assessment and planning interview with follow-up care navigation. CAMS is based around a model of STB which states that youth become suicidal in response to overwhelming pain, and treatment identifies and targets the drivers of suicide as the primary focus of assessment and intervention.
Driver Focused Skills Training
The CAMS approach focuses on therapeutic assessment, collaborative identification and treatment of the patient-defined STB drivers (i.e., the problems that make suicide compelling to the patient) and utilizes problem-focused treatment sessions to address the drivers in order to reduce the wish to die. In the SOARS brief intervention model, specific skills are taught to youth based on CAMS drivers/case conceptualization of suicidality.
Caregiver Skills Training
Caregivers will receive 3, 30-minute modules across 3 sessions that provide explicit coaching in several skills adapted from evidence-based treatments for youth suicidality including DBT and CBT.48,49 Module content will include 1) psychoeducation on suicidality and the escalation cycle and creation of a communication plan related to responding to youth suicidality (i.e., Crisis Escalation and Communication Plan); 2) positive communication and relationship building strategies including reflective listening, validation, and how to implement regular teen-directed one-on-one time; and 3) setting up behavioral expectations, house rules, and using positive reinforcement based contingency management in the home (i.e., targeted praise, using rewards to promote more effective behaviors). All modules will include didactic skill building, role-play of skill use with the therapist, and a check-in with the youth and youth therapist to collaboratively problem-solve barriers to use of skills.
Lethal Means Safety
The CAMS Therapeutic Assessment incorporates low levels of lethal means restriction (see above). Experimental Intervention Component 4 will provide a high level of lethal means restriction that includes the evaluation of the need for a lock box, the provision of a lock box if needed, structured process for evaluating home safety in each room of the house, specific directives to accomplish, follow up with the clinician, and problem-solving barriers to lethal means safety over two, 30-minute modules delivered across 2 sessions.
RECRUITING
Seattle Children's, Seattle
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
NIH
University of Washington
OTHER