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USAF Suicide Prevention Study


A suicide prevention program implemented by the United States Air Force produced sustained reductions in suicide and other violent conduct.

The study abstract is presented here.

Risk of suicide and related adverse outcomes after exposure to a suicide prevention programme in the US Air Force: Cohort study.

Knox KL, Litts DA, Talcott GW, Feig JC, Caine ED. University of Rochester Center for the Study and Prevention of Suicide, University of Rochester Medical Center, Rochester, NY 14642, USA. Kerry_knox@urmc.rochester.edu

OBJECTIVE
To evaluate the impact of the US Air Force suicide prevention programme on risk of suicide and other outcomes that share underlying risk factors.

DESIGN
Cohort study with quasi-experimental design and analysis of cohorts before (1990-6) and after (1997-2002) the intervention.

PARTICIPANTS
5,260,292 US Air Force personnel (around 84% were men).

INTERVENTION
A multilayered intervention targeted at reducing risk factors and enhancing factors considered protective. The intervention consisted of removing the stigma of seeking help for a mental health or psychosocial problem, enhancing understanding of mental health, and changing policies and social norms.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES
Relative risk reductions (the prevented fraction) for suicide and other outcomes hypothesised to be sensitive to broadly based community prevention efforts, (family violence, accidental death, homicide). Additional outcomes not exclusively associated with suicide were included because of the comprehensiveness of the programme.

RESULTS
Implementation of the programme was associated with a sustained decline in the rate of suicide and other adverse outcomes. A 33% relative risk reduction was observed for suicide after the intervention; reductions for other outcomes ranged from 18-54%.

CONCLUSION
A systemic intervention aimed at changing social norms about seeking help and incorporating training in suicide prevention has a considerable impact on promotion of mental health. The impact on adverse outcomes in addition to suicide strengthens the conclusion that the programme was responsible for these reductions in risk.

BMJ. 2003 Dec 13. Volume 327(7428) p. 1376.


For a link to bmj.com, where you can then access the full-text article, click here. Then, scroll down to the third item.

To return to the first page of the MHS web essay, click here.



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It was most recently updated on 1 July 2004.
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