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The Group Risk Reduction Intervention Therapy (GRRIT) Project
Sponsor: University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Summary
Investigators will evaluate a group format adaptation of Brief Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy for Suicide (i.e., G-BCBT) on suicide ideation (Aim 1), ability to use coping strategies (Aim 2), and overall mental health (exploratory analysis). The combination of tailored means safety counseling and training in evidence-based emotion regulation and cognitive flexibility skills delivered via a 12-session group therapy treatment will decrease service members' overall suicide risk. The group format will provide opportunities to learn and practice skills, thereby enhancing self-efficacy. G-BCBT outcomes are expected to be no worse than Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) group skills training, an existing gold standard intervention that is twice the length of time as G-BCBT.
Official title: Piloting a Brief Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (BCBT) Group Intervention for Suicidal Behavior Among Active Duty Military Personnel
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - 99 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
141
Start Date
2023-06-01
Completion Date
2026-02-28
Last Updated
2025-03-12
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Group Brief Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (G-BCBT)
G-BCBT comprises 12, 90 minute sessions organized in three phases: (1) emotion regulation, (2) cognitive flexibility, and (3) relapse prevention. The first session will be a tailored individual session focusing on person-specific crisis response planning and developing the participant's suicide mode. Sessions 2 through 5 feature treatment goal setting, followed by teaching skills in stimulus control, mindfulness, relaxation, a reasons for living task, and survival kit. Sessions 6 through 10 provide opportunities for improving cognitive flexibility via cognitive-behavioral exercises such as ABC worksheets, challenging questions, patterns of problematic thinking worksheets, coping cards, and activity planning. The third phase of treatment focuses on relapse prevention, and encompasses the last two sessions of treatments where group participants demonstrate mastery of the skills learned in treatment and practice successfully navigating a future stressful situation.
Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) Skills Group
DBT comprises 24 weekly group therapy sessions each lasting 90 minutes. DBT sessions include worksheets and skills practice activities. The DBT protocol entails three phases as follows. Phase I (8 weeks) covers a two-week mindfulness orientation and a six-week distress tolerance module. Distress tolerance skill building includes paired muscle relaxation, distraction, and radical acceptance. Phase II (nine weeks) entails a two-week mindfulness module followed by seven weeks of emotion regulation skill building. Emotion regulation content includes a model of describing emotion and a pleasant events checklist. Phase III (7 weeks) includes two-week mindfulness and orientation module, followed by five weeks of interpersonal effectiveness training. Interpersonal effectiveness training approaches include clarifying goals in interpersonal situations, guidelines for keeping relationships, and self-respect. Mindfulness, cutting across modules, addresses review of concepts such as Wise Mind.
Locations (1)
Naval Medical Center Portsmouth
Portsmouth, Virginia, United States