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A Just-in-time Adaptive Intervention for Suicide Safety Planning in Adolescents
Sponsor: Ksana Health
Summary
Despite efforts to prevent suicide, US rates are climbing, and suicide is the second leading cause of death amongst youth. Digital tools, especially personal smartphones, are promising avenues to address these issues and can be used to increase engagement with effective interventions such as suicide safety planning. The BRITE suicide safety planning app was developed on evidence-based principles and has undergone rigorous formative development and effectiveness evaluations. However, to optimize its functionality, commercial viability, and scale its implementation, issues related to user engagement needed to be addressed. This 3 month Pragmatic Randomized Trial will evaluate the impact of the ViraSafe app-an enhanced version of the BRITE suicide safety planning app-on improving engagement with coping skills and safety planning among suicidal adolescents by comparing its intervention components to those of the original BRITE app.
Official title: BRITE 2.0: A Just-in-time Adaptive Intervention for Suicide Safety Planning in Adolescents (ViraSafe RCT (SBIR Phase 2))
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
13 Years - 24 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
100
Start Date
2026-02-16
Completion Date
2027-12-31
Last Updated
2026-02-02
Healthy Volunteers
No
Conditions
Interventions
ViraSafe: Treatment pushes
ViraSafe participants will complete a safety plan with their provider. Safety plan content will be editable and viewable throughout the intervention for both participants and their providers. Participants will be able to access the safety plan at any time in ViraSafe. Additionally, patients using ViraSafe will be prompted to complete a daily distress rating. ViraSafe uses automated algorithms (i.e., just in time adaptive intervention features) and user input from distress ratings to facilitate increased engagement with coping skills and pushes safety planning materials to users at periods of high risk (i.e., increases in emotional distress). In addition to the just-in-time reminders (i.e., nudges) pushed automatically by the system, through the Vira Pro platform, practitioners can schedule just-in-time reminders (i.e., "nudges") to arrive in the user's phone to support their behavior change plan.
BRITE
The BRITE app contains the teen's safety plan, links to videos of how to use coping strategies they indicated in their safety plan that have been useful for them (like guided mediation or deep breathing), a library of evidence-based and age-appropriate coping skills and strategies that the adolescent can learn more about, photos or videos that the adolescent has uploaded to the app, and includes a question asking them to rate their distress level in the moment: "What is your distress level right now?" (1 is "Least Distressed" to 5, which is "Most Distressed"). Then, the teen is asked to identify the feeling that fits their distress level via 12 emoji images: "Which feelings fit your distress level?" Based on adolescent's distress rate, the BRITE app suggests coping skills or "activities" for the adolescent to lower their distress level.
Locations (3)
Ksana Health Inc
Eugene, Oregon, United States
STAR Center, Western Psychiatric Institute & Clinic
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States