Does screening high school students for psychological distress, deliberate self-harm, or suicidal ideation cause distress--and is it acceptable? An Australian-based study
journal contribution
posted on 2011-01-01, 00:00authored byJ Robinson, H Yuen, C Martin, A Hughes, Gennady Baksheev, S Dodd, S Bapat, W Schwass, P McGorry, Alison YungAlison Yung
Programs designed to detect students at risk of depression and suicidality have shown success (Shaffer et al., 2004). The current study sought to examine whether or not such a program was acceptable to participants and whether or not it caused distress. Participants were boys aged 14 to 16. Participants were assessed using an on-line questionnaire; acceptability was measured via postal questionnaire. Of 272 participants, 31 (11.4%) were considered at-risk; 13 required ongoing support, 8 of whom had not previously sought help. Overall screening did not appear to cause significant undue distress, although some differences were evident between at-risk and not at-risk students. All participants found the program acceptable. When conducted carefully, early detection programs can be an effective and acceptable method of identifying at-risk adolescents.
History
Journal
Crisis: the journal of crisis intervention and suicide prevention
Volume
32
Issue
5
Pagination
254 - 263
Publisher
Auspices of the International Association for Suicide Prevention