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Development and evaluation of a leaflet for concerned family members and friends: “It’s safe to talk about suicide”

Abstract

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from SAGE Publications via the DOI in this record.Objectives: Significant others can play a key role in suicide prevention but little attention has been given to the resources they need in order to do so successfully. Based on previous qualitative research, and working in partnership with suicide prevention charities, we developed a simple educational leaflet to help family members and friends recognise and respond to a possible suicidal crisis. 15,000 copies were disseminated through a wide range of community agencies within one English local authority. This paper describes the development, distribution and evaluation of the leaflet. The aim of the evaluation was to assess: how the distribution strategy was working; whether the leaflet was regarded as useful and acceptable; how it was being used, and whether there were any concerns about its content. Design: Interview study Methods: We conducted two rounds of semi-structured telephone interviews with every agency on the distribution list, and in-depth qualitative interviews with a purposefully-selected sub-sample. Results: The leaflet was seen as filling an important gap. It was eagerly embraced by staff in frontline agencies, who either passed it on to clients, used it for their own personal/professional development and to support clients or colleagues, or used it as a teaching aid. No concerns were raised about its content. Conclusion: The findings reveal a deep-seated fear of talking about suicide among frontline staff. They were using the leaflet in ways we had not anticipated, demonstrating lateral thinking and a real commitment to suicide prevention in agencies that are not typically associated with it.Funding for all or part of this project was provided by The James Wentworth-Stanley Memorial Fund, The Horne Family Charitable Foundation, Devon County Council and the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) CLAHRC for the South West Peninsula

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