Brief video-based suicide prevention training for primary care

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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: One-third of individuals who die by suicide had primary care contact in the preceding month. Primary care trainees need engaging and effective suicide prevention training that can be delivered within tight time and resource constraints. However, training is currently scarce and its effectiveness unknown. The objective of this study was to assess learner engagement, learning, self-efficacy, and perceived ability to transfer training to practice from brief video-based modules centered around visual concept mapping of suicide prevention practices. METHODS: We assigned 127 primary care trainees 21 brief instructional videos to watch. We analyzed engagement by monitoring the proportion of learners who began each video and the proportion of the video watched. We assessed knowledge and self-efficacy pre-and posttraining. Learners provided feedback on satisfaction with modules and ability to transfer training to practice. RESULTS: Engagement was high, with most learners watching most of each video (mean=83.2%). Increase in knowledge was large (t(131 df)=19.91, P

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Pisani, A. R., Cross, W. F., West, J. C., Crean, H. F., & Caine, E. D. (2021). Brief video-based suicide prevention training for primary care. Family Medicine, 53(2), 104–110. https://doi.org/10.22454/FamMed.2021.367209

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