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Reducing Firearm Suicide Among Veterans: Evaluating the Effectiveness of Peer-Delivered Lethal Means Counseling
Sponsor: VA Office of Research and Development
Summary
Suicide prevention is a top priority for the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), with a major emphasis on developing innovative and effective ways to prevent firearm suicide. Research suggests that secure firearm storage can decrease risk for suicide and the current project aims to evaluate a novel approach to increasing secure storage through an experimental design. The intervention takes one-hour or less and involves a peer-to-peer discussion about secure firearm storage, focusing on participants' reasons for and against using more secure firearm storage practices. The project will evaluate whether Veterans who receive this intervention report greater use of secure firearm storage practices than Veterans who receive only psychoeducational materials on this topic. Secure firearm storage practices will be evaluated over the course of one year. It is hypothesized that Veterans who engage in the peer-to-peer intervention will report greater use of secure firearm storage practices than those who receive only psychoeducational materials. Relevant to Veterans' health, secure firearm storage decreases Veteran firearm suicide risk and may help prevent suicide. In addition, this peer-delivered intervention is preferred by Veterans, and has the flexibility to be implemented before suicide risk develops and in settings outside of the VA. This means the intervention has the potential to reach more Veterans, even those who do not receive VA healthcare.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
100
Start Date
2026-07-01
Completion Date
2030-09-30
Last Updated
2026-03-12
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Conditions
Interventions
Peer Engagement and Exploration of Responsibility and Safety
PEERS involves a one-on-one session with a firearm-owning Veteran peer interventionist. The appointment will last between 15 minutes and one hour, and the modality (i.e., in-person or virtual) will be based on Veteran participant preference. Principal components of the PEERS session will include: 1) engaging - initiating conversation in a non-confrontational manner; 2) focusing - quickly concentrating the discussion on the topic of firearms and means safety; 3) evoking - reflecting the participants' reasons both for and against engaging in means safety, leveraging the participants' own rationale for change as a tool for increasing behavior change; and 4) planning - once a plan is agreed upon, this information is put into writing. Participants will also be provided the same psychoeducational materials provided to the participants in the active control condition.
Active Control
Veterans will receive no treatment and will not interact with peers. A no treatment control condition was selected due to the preventative nature of PEERS, as well as the early stage of evaluation for this intervention. However, given the varied recruitment outlets and subsequent lack of standardized "usual care," as well as ethical concerns with not providing important resources to firearm owning Veterans, two informational handouts will be added to this control condition. Specifically, Veterans in this condition will be provided with an informational handout developed by the National Sports Shooting Foundation, which includes a variety of secure firearm storage options, as well as a handout listing national mental health and suicide prevention resources.
Locations (1)
Southeast Louisiana Veterans Health Care System, New Orleans, LA
New Orleans, Louisiana, United States