Project Summary/Abstract
Suicide is the eighth leading cause of death among U.S. children ages 5-11 years. From 2012-2017, youth
suicides increased at an alarming 14.7% annually. During this time, ER visits increased 92% among 5- to 18-
year-olds—to 1.12 million. Almost half of these visits involved a 5- to 11-year-old child. To date, however,
limited research on child suicide and suicidal behavior (SB) exists, and there are no empirically supported
prevention programs despite recognition by NIMH that youth suicide prevention should be a national priority.
One especially vulnerable group is children with a parental history of suicide attempts (PH+). PH+ children are
4-6x more likely to engage in SB than their peers and show especially early age of onset—often before age 10.
In this proposal, we target specific parent- and child-level vulnerabilities/risk factors for SB among these
families. Although suicide risk is heritable, existing research shows (1) effects of shared family environment on
SB and suicide, over-and-above genetic influences; and (2) specific family environment mechanisms that
contribute to SB and suicide. Such mechanisms include harsh, invalidating, and low-warmth parenting, as well
as impaired parent-child communication and poor parental monitoring of children’s behavior. These parenting
practices reinforce emotional lability and emotion dysregulation, which are common to both parents and
children in at-risk families. In our previous study (R21MH116206), PH+ children, ages 6-9 years, reported less
family cohesion, and PH+ parents reported more permissive parenting, which co-occurs with harshness,
hostility, and emotion dysregulation. Effective interventions that target these parenting practices and improve
parent and child emotion regulation (ER) may reduce risk for youth SB but have not been tested in PH+
families. We will compare a virtual version of Incredible Years® parent training (IY-PT) to Enhanced Usual Care
(EUC). IY-PT decreases parents’ emotional reactivity and teaches them to effectively “coach” their children on
successful ER. IY-PT is effective in increasing positive parenting and improving ER skills of both parents and
children, with large effect sizes that maintain at 1- and 2-year follow-ups. We will (1) test acceptability and
feasibility of virtual IY-PT for this population from both parent and clinician perspectives; (2) determine whether
IY-PT is effective in decreasing suicide risk among PH+ youth; and (3) explore acceptability and feasibility as
potential moderators between PH+ status and parent and child outcome. ER and parenting are primary
outcomes and NSSI, SI, and depressive symptoms are secondary outcomes. Measures include interviews,
direct observations, and self-reports. Participants include 100 PH+ families who will complete a baseline, be
randomized to virtual IY-PT or EUC, and complete 1-,3-, and 6-month reassessments post-intervention. This
effectiveness-implementation hybrid model design I, guided by PRISM Implementation Science Framework,
could have major implications for preventing an imminent public health concern among at-risk youth.
Public Health Relevance Statement
Project Narrative
With this proposal we seek to prevent an imminent public health concern, suicidal behavior (SB), among
exceedingly vulnerable 6- to 9-year-old children whose parents have a history of suicide attempt (PH+).
Through both genetic and familial mechanisms, these children are at especially high risk of NSSI and SB
including suicide attempts, however, no prevention programs exist for young children in PH+ families. We will
use an established prevention program to address family-and child-level mediators of SB and NSSI and
evaluate parental and clinician acceptability, feasibility, and effectiveness on reducing suicide risk factors in
highly vulnerable youth.
NIH Spending Category
No NIH Spending Category available.
Project Terms
11 year old18 year old9 year oldAccelerationAddressAdultAgeAge of OnsetAwarenessBehaviorBehavior TherapyBuffersCause of DeathChildChild BehaviorChild RearingChild of Impaired ParentsChildhoodClinicCommunication impairmentDiagnosticDisciplineEducational process of instructingEffectivenessEmergency department visitEmotionalEmotionsEmpathyEnvironmentFamilyFeeling suicidalFutureGeneticGoalsHeritabilityHostilityInterventionInterviewMeasuresMediatorMethodsMonitorNational Institute of Mental HealthOutcomeParentsParticipantPatient Self-ReportPerceptionPhysiologicalPopulationPractical Robust Implementation and Sustainability ModelPrevention programPublic HealthQualitative MethodsRaceRandomizedRecording of previous eventsReportingResearchResearch PriorityRiskRisk AssessmentRisk FactorsRisk ReductionSchoolsSelf-Injurious BehaviorServicesStressful EventSuicideSuicide attemptSuicide preventionTestingTimeTraining ProgramsVisitVulnerable PopulationsYouthacceptability and feasibilitybehavior observationboyscohesioncoping mechanismdepressive symptomsearly onseteffective interventioneffectiveness testingeffectiveness/implementation hybridefficacious interventionemotion dysregulationemotion regulationexternalizing behaviorfollow-upgirlshigh riskhigh risk populationimplementation frameworkimprovedintervention effectmaltreatmentmodel designnon-suicidal self injuryoffspringparent-child communicationparental monitoringparenting interventionpeerpermissivenesspost interventionpreventprimary outcomeprogramsreducing suicideresiliencesecondary outcomeskillssocial skillsstatisticssuicidal adolescentsuicidal behaviorsuicidal risksuicide ratetransmission processtreatment as usualtrendvirtual
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