Frontiers in Psychiatry (Jul 2023)

Effects of gatekeeper trainings from the Austrian national suicide prevention program

  • Martin Plöderl,
  • Martin Plöderl,
  • Clemens Fartacek,
  • Clemens Fartacek,
  • Thomas Kapitany,
  • Ulrike Schrittwieser,
  • Thomas Niederkrotenthaler

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1118319
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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BackgroundThe development and implementation of gatekeeper trainings were first goals in the national suicide prevention strategy “Suicide Prevention Austria” (SUPRA). The current study aims to assess the short- and longer-term effects of the SUPRA gatekeeper trainings in comparison with established gatekeeper trainings.MethodsWe evaluated 28 gatekeeper trainings including 427 participants by assessing improvement of knowledge (facts about suicide and suicide prevention), gatekeeper self-efficacy and attitudes, and gatekeeper behavior (e.g., asking depressed people about suicide). Assessments were immediately before and after the gatekeeper trainings, with an additional follow-up 6 months later. Effects were compared with benchmark effects of established gatekeeper trainings.ResultsThere were substantial improvements in knowledge, self-efficacy and attitudes immediately after the training, comparable or larger than known from evaluations of established gatekeeper trainings. Most of these changes were upheld in the follow-up assessment, with effects comparable to other gatekeeper trainings. There was only a small increase of self-reported gatekeeper behavior, in line with results from other gatekeeper trainings.ConclusionThe SUPRA gatekeeper training had some beneficial effects in the short- and longterm, with effect sizes comparable to established gatekeeper trainings.

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