Consensus Statement on Ethical & Safety Practices for Conducting Digital Monitoring Studies with People at Risk of Suicide and Related Behaviors
Abstract
Objective
Methods
Results
Conclusions
Methods
Delphi Process
Identification of key issues/questions on this research topic
Panel selection
Survey: Round 1
Issue | Question | Answer | |
---|---|---|---|
Exclusion of participants | Should any potential participants be excluded due to elevated risk of suicide? (Select one) | No, we should be collecting data from everyone, even those at the highest levels of suicide risk | 90.5% |
Yes, people who are too high risk should not participate in research | 9.5% | ||
Conditions to staying in the study | Should there be certain conditions participants must agree to in order to enter/stay in a study, such as agreeing that they will go to treatment sessions or call a hotline when at high risk? (Select one) | No, we can encourage people to do these things but should not set any such conditions | 85.7% |
Yes, there should be conditions participants must agree to enter/stay in the study | 14.3% | ||
Informed Consent | Should participants be explicitly informed of the following during informed consent? (Select all that apply) | Whether responses can trigger follow‐up and/or intervention actions by the research team and/or clinicians, which may include breaking of confidentiality | 100% |
Information that the participant should not rely on the study monitoring to keep them safe/alive | 100% | ||
Information about who will have access to their data including third party software developers to improve their app product | 100% | ||
How often researchers will check participants' responses | 95.2% | ||
Circumstances under which the subject's participation may be terminated by the investigator without regard to the subject's consent | 95.2% | ||
Who to contact in case of crisis | 95.2% | ||
Information that there can be technology failures | 95.2% | ||
Information that the participant won't be automatically hospitalized if their responses trigger a follow up assessment by the research team | 90.5% | ||
How and what information will be shared with participants and others if confidentiality is breached | 90.0% | ||
What risk monitoring activities and interventions will be taking place | 76.2% |
Issue | Question | Answer | Adults | Adolescents |
---|---|---|---|---|
Contact information | What contact information, including collateral contact information, should studies be required to collect? (Select all that apply) | Participant cell phone number | 100% | 95.2% |
Parent contact information | ‐ | 90.5% | ||
Participant home address | 88.9% | 76.2% | ||
Participant email address | 83.3% | 71.4% | ||
Collateral contact | 72.2% | 61.9% | ||
Multiple collateral contacts | 38.9% | 33.3% | ||
Participant's clinician | 27.8% | 28.6% | ||
Participant's social media account(s) | 11.1% | 9.5% | ||
None | 14.3% | 0% |
Issue | Question | Answer | |
---|---|---|---|
Technological and safety procedures | Which issues should researchers address BEFORE data collection begins in a real‐time monitoring study? | ||
Technology (select all that apply) | Figure out what to do when technology fails | 100% | |
Test the alert system | 100% | ||
In a standardized manner, go over items of incidental data collection (medical information, voice, video) being obtained and the process of alerting and collecting data | 100% | ||
Determine how to store and potentially share location data | 95.2% | ||
Safety (select all that apply) | Provide the participant with emergency contact information | 100% | |
Determine what criteria should be used to delineate specific criteria for triggering further risk assessment or intervention | 100% | ||
Train study staff with risk assessment protocol for assessing and responding to participant suicidal ideation and behavior | 100% | ||
Solicit feedback from participant about their desired response from research team for varying levels of risk | 55.0% |
Issue | Question | Answer | |
---|---|---|---|
Frequency of reviewing participant data | If available technology is not able to alert researchers in real time, how often should participant data be reviewed by a human on the research team for risk assessment purposes? (Select one) | More than two times a day | 5.3% |
Twice every day | 21.1% | ||
Once every day | 31.6% | ||
Every weekday | 31.6% | ||
Less than once a day | 10.5% | ||
Determining risk level | What key pieces of information should researchers collect to determine a participant's level of risk? (Select all that apply) | Level of intent to die | 94.4% |
Presence of suicide plan | 94.4% | ||
Access to suicide plan/method | 88.9% | ||
Level of desire to die | 83.3% | ||
Presence of any suicidal ideation (no/yes) | 66.7% | ||
Length of response window | When the research team learns that the participant is at "imminent risk," what is the longest acceptable time window to respond? (Select one) | Within 6 h | 22.2% |
Within 12 h | 50.0% | ||
Within 24 h | 22.2% | ||
Within 48 h | 0% | ||
Within 72 h | 5.6% |
Issue | Question | Answer | Risk level | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Low/Moderate | High | |||
Potential interventions | What action/intervention should be taken in each case? (Select all that apply) | Pop up message with suggestions to call a suicide hotline/crisis line | 66.7% | 66.7% |
Pop up message with suggestion to contact participant's supports such as family | 66.7% | 50.0% | ||
Pop up message with suggestion to call clinician | 61.1% | 61.1% | ||
Pop up message with personalized safety plan instructions | 61.1% | 77.8% | ||
Pop up automated/interactive risk assessment | 44.4% | 77.8% | ||
Research team contacts participant for risk assessment | 11.1% | 94.4% | ||
Research team calls 911 to request wellness check | 5.5% | 50.0% |
Issue | Question | Answer | Automated is sufficient | Human outreach needed |
---|---|---|---|---|
At what level is an automated intervention sufficient and at which level of risk is human out‐reach required? (Select one option for each row) | Low risk | 100% | 0% | |
Moderate risk | 80.0% | 20.0% | ||
High/imminent risk | 20.0% | 80.0% |
Issue | Question | Answer | Adult | Adolescent |
---|---|---|---|---|
Steps for reaching out to participants | If you believe that human outreach is required, what steps should be taken if a participant is not reachable by the research team? (select all that apply) | Formulate a personalized risk plan beforehand that is agreed upon during consent process | 85.0% | 80.0% |
Notify parent | 20.0% | 90.0% | ||
Notify collateral contact | 65.0% | 65.0% | ||
Contact clinician | 20.0% | 30.0% | ||
Call 911 and send ambulance team to participant | 30.0% | 30.0% | ||
Do nothing | 5.0% | 5.0% |
Issue | Question | Answer | |
---|---|---|---|
Participant removal | Should participants be removed from the study due to elevated risk or clinical severity? (Select one) | No, we should be collecting data from everyone. Even those at the highest levels of risk | 100% |
Yes, people who are too high risk should not participate in research | 0% | ||
Data and safety monitoring boards & independent safety monitors | Should all real‐time monitoring studies have a DSMB or ISM? (Select one) | No, DSMBs or ISMs are not needed for such studies | 31.6% |
Yes, but DSMBs or ISMs should be required only for such studies with participants at high risk for suicide | 47.4% | ||
Yes, DSMBs or ISMs should be required for all such studies | 21.1% | ||
DSMB/ISM members | What DSMB members should be required for real‐time monitoring type studies? (Select all that apply) | Expert in managing suicide risk | 91.7% |
Someone with an understanding of the technology | 58.3% | ||
Licensed clinician | 41.7% | ||
Community member (someone with lived experience) | 33.3% | ||
Legal expertise in the field of psychiatry | 25.0% | ||
Data security | What are minimal standards for data security? (Select all that apply) | Secure web‐based platforms | 94.4% |
Deidentified data storage | 83.3% | ||
HIPAA compliant platform | 77.8% |
Consensus meeting
Survey: Round 2
Data Analysis
Results
Issues to Consider Before Data Collection Begins
Exclusion of participants
Conditions for enrolling in the study
Informed consent
Contact information
Technological and safety procedures
Issues to Consider During Data Collection
Frequency of reviewing participant data
Determining risk level
Length of response window
Potential interventions
Participant removal
Data safety and monitoring
Data security
Discussion
Researchers conducting real‐time monitoring studies of those at risk for suicide and related behaviors should strive to: 1. Not exclude participants soley on the basis of elevated clinical severity or suicide risk. 2. Not exclude or remove participants who are not willing or able to meet pre‐specified conditions for participant or help‐seeking (e.g., remaining in treatment or calling a hotline when at high risk). 3. Provide participants with explicit information about key elements of study procedures during the informed consent process. 4. Collect and retain (during the real‐time monitoring period) contact information (phone, email, and home address) from both the participant and at least one collateral to facilitate contacting participants during periods of perceived elevated risk. 5. Address key aspects of technology use and participant safety before proceeding with data collection. 6. Review participant survey responses at least once every weekday. 7. Respond to those determined to be at “imminent risk” for suicide within 12 h of learning of this risk. 8. Collect data about suicidal desire, intent, plan to determine participants' level of risk. 9. Respond to participants determined to be at high or “imminent” risk for suicide with automated risk assessments, safety plans, and human outreach (depending on risk and type of study) as soon as possible. 10. Store data in de‐identified form, in secure servers, and in compliance with HIPAA guidelines. In cases in which data safety and monitoring boards are used they should include at least one person with expertise managing suicide risk. |
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