4.6 Article

Short-term effects of a suicide education intervention for family caregivers of people who are suicidal

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING
Volume 23, Issue 1-2, Pages 91-102

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jocn.12092

Keywords

family caregiver; intervention; mental health nurses; suicide education

Categories

Funding

  1. National Science Council [NSC 97-2314-B-214-011-MY3]

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Aims and objectivesTo evaluate the short-term effects of a suicide care educational intervention on the family's ability to care, family's caring stress levels and family's attitudes towards attempted suicide. BackgroundResearch has demonstrated that suicide prevention educational programmes are provided mostly for professional staff and not for the family caregivers of people who are suicidal. DesignA experimental design, using two groups and a pre- and postintervention survey method, was used. MethodsA randomised controlled study was conducted with 74 family caregivers of people who are suicidal (37 using suicide education and 37 in the control group). The experimental group was provided with a two-hour suicide care education intervention, and the control group received normal suicide care support. Participants were recruited at a Suicide Prevention Centre and two acute psychiatric hospitals between October 2009-December 2010. Three questionnaires were collected: (1) the Suicidal Caring Ability Scale (2) the Caring Stress Scale and (3) the Suicide Attitudes Scale. Descriptive statistics, independent t-tests or Mann-Whitney U-tests were used to analyse the data. ResultsThe results demonstrated that there were statistically significant differences in the Suicidal Caring Ability Scale and the Suicide Attitudes Scale but no statistically significant differences in the Caring Stress Scale. That is, the suicide education programme can promote the ability to care for people who are suicidal and can generate a positive attitude towards people who are suicidal from their caregivers. ConclusionsFamily caregivers of suicidal individuals who attended the psycho-education programme had an increased caring ability and positive attitudes for their suicidal relatives. Relevance to clinical practiceNurses could use the two-hour personal suicidal education programme to increase one's ability to care for their relatives who had attempted suicide and promote one's positive attitudes towards attempted suicide.

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