Study About Group and Phone Follow-Up After a Crisis

NCT ID: NCT05637203

Last Updated: 2025-09-10

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

RECRUITING

Clinical Phase

PHASE3

Total Enrollment

100 participants

Study Classification

INTERVENTIONAL

Study Start Date

2024-04-18

Study Completion Date

2026-04-30

Brief Summary

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Crisis stabilization centers (CSCs) provide a less costly and more comfortable alternative to Emergency Department care for individuals with suicidal crises. With demand for crisis alternatives growing, effective interventions that fit the unique workflows and workforce of CSCs are needed to realize their life-saving potential. To address this need, the investigators will adapt, and pilot test the effectiveness of an interpersonally enhanced recovery and follow-up intervention delivered during and after admissions acute suicidal crises.

Detailed Description

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The US is poised for growth and investment in our mental health crisis system, with a national phone/text line launching, accompanied by new funding for crisis services. More than 600 Crisis Stabilization Centers (CSCs) across the US provide suicidal clients with a more comfortable and less costly alternative to Emergency Department (ED) care. In light of rising demand, there is an urgent need for feasible, effective, interpersonal, recovery-oriented interventions. This study adapts and tests a novel intervention for delivery prior to and after discharge from CSCs. THRIVE uses the Interpersonal Theory of Suicide as a framework to bolster social connectedness and counter perceived burdensomeness.

Preliminary data shows promising results. However, CSC workflows and culture require context-specific adaptation. This study leverages the Model for Adaptation Design and Impact to adapt THRIVE for CSCs, test feasibility, acceptability, and appropriateness, and conduct a pilot RCT in two CSCs. The CSC-adapted intervention addresses interpersonal drivers of suicide risk and bolsters safety, recovery, and community linkage through: (a) a 'belonging and giving' group during CSC stay, (b) recovery coaching calls for 4 weeks post-discharge, and (c) an optional phone app that provides reinforcement and resources for connection. The pilot will compare THRIVE + Discharge/Safety Planning (D/SP) to D/SP alone, examining the degree to which THRIVE engages the targeted mechanisms of change at one- and three-months post-discharge.

Aim 1. Adapt THRIVE and complete CSC-specific manual using MADI.

Aim 2. Test feasibility, acceptability, appropriateness of THRIVE for CSCs. CSC Guests (n = 20). 75% of guests will participate in a THRIVE group and at least one follow-up session within one month of discharge. Ratings of acceptability and satisfaction will be ≧ 75%.

CSC Staff (n = 4). Fidelity ratings of audio recordings of group and coaching calls with be at least

≧ 75% for all staff who deliver THRIVE. CSC Administrators will rate acceptability and appropriateness of THRIVE for CSCs as ≧ 75%.

Aim 3. Conduct a randomized pilot effectiveness trial (n = 100) to assess the effect of THRIVE on treatment initiation and on key interpersonal drivers of suicide - belongingness and burdensomeness. We hypothesize that CSC guests who receive THRIVE + D/SP vs. D/SP alone will have:

H1: Higher rates of treatment initiation at 1 month and 3 months from CSC discharge.

H2. Increased belongingness and decreased burdensomeness at 1 and 3 months after discharge.

We will explore the effect of the intervention on treatment engagement, acute care psychiatric readmissions, and suicidal ideation and suicidal behavior over 3-month follow-up. At the end of the study, THRIVE for CSCs will be ready to test in an effectiveness trial for preventing suicidal behavior.

Conditions

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Suicide Crisis; Emotional

Study Design

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Allocation Method

RANDOMIZED

Intervention Model

PARALLEL

Primary Study Purpose

TREATMENT

Blinding Strategy

DOUBLE

Investigators Outcome Assessors

Study Groups

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THRIVE + Discharge / Safety Planning

Participants assigned to the intervention condition will receive THRIVE Crisis Recovery and Care Transition Program, which consists of group-based reflections on "giving and belonging" and a plan for community connection and treatment, followed by 3-4 coaching calls to reinforce and troubleshoot the plans.

Group Type EXPERIMENTAL

THRIVE (Toward Hope, Recovery, Interpersonal Growth, Values, and Engagement)

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

THRIVE is an interpersonally focused recovery and care transition program. THRIVE (previously called "RELATE" in our SAMHSA grants) involves engaging a person during and following acute suicidal crisis in a sequence of interpersonally focused therapeutic tasks. The purpose of THRIVE is to help CSC guests re-build connections and "contribute" to the world in ways they find personally meaningful, while also transitioning safely to outpatient, community-based care. THRIVE involves a Belonging and Giving Reflections Group while at the CSC, followed by a 4-week, phone-based, recovery and care transition series of coaching calls.

Discharge / Safety Planning Alone

Participants assigned to the control condition will receive Discharge/Safety Planning as it is practiced by Connections Health Solutions per industry best practices.

Group Type ACTIVE_COMPARATOR

Discharge / Safety Planning

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

* A written safety plan completed with the person
* Mental health appointment scheduled within seven days
* One phone follow-up call within 30 days

Interventions

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THRIVE (Toward Hope, Recovery, Interpersonal Growth, Values, and Engagement)

THRIVE is an interpersonally focused recovery and care transition program. THRIVE (previously called "RELATE" in our SAMHSA grants) involves engaging a person during and following acute suicidal crisis in a sequence of interpersonally focused therapeutic tasks. The purpose of THRIVE is to help CSC guests re-build connections and "contribute" to the world in ways they find personally meaningful, while also transitioning safely to outpatient, community-based care. THRIVE involves a Belonging and Giving Reflections Group while at the CSC, followed by a 4-week, phone-based, recovery and care transition series of coaching calls.

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Discharge / Safety Planning

* A written safety plan completed with the person
* Mental health appointment scheduled within seven days
* One phone follow-up call within 30 days

Intervention Type BEHAVIORAL

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

1. Admission to CSC with suicidal crisis, as defined by active suicide ideation ascertained by the Columbia Suicide-Severity Rating scale, which the sites already routinely administer.
2. Ability and willingness to provide information for and permission to contact one person in case of emergency or inability to reach the participant for follow-up

Exclusion Criteria

1. Under age 18.
2. Inability to communicate with the researcher in English.
3. Acute psychiatric instability (e.g., psychotic symptoms). Most patients with psychosis are transferred to Emergency Departments instead of CSCs, so we do not expect many exclusions based on this criterion.
4. Inability to access a phone to participate in phone follow-up program.
Minimum Eligible Age

18 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Centerstone Research Institute

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

University of Rochester

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Anthony Pisani

Professor

Responsibility Role PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR

Locations

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Connections Health-Urgent Psychiatric Center

Phoenix, Arizona, United States

Site Status RECRUITING

Mental Health Cooperative

Nashville, Tennessee, United States

Site Status NOT_YET_RECRUITING

Countries

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United States

Central Contacts

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Jennifer Lockman, PhD

Role: CONTACT

615-830-2413

Facility Contacts

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Margie Balfour, MD

Role: primary

972-251-0616

Tosha Pharr, LCSW

Role: primary

866-816-0433

Other Identifiers

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00007664

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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