JMIR Medical Informatics (Apr 2024)

Reducing Firearm Access for Suicide Prevention: Implementation Evaluation of the Web-Based “Lock to Live” Decision Aid in Routine Health Care Encounters

  • Julie Angerhofer Richards,
  • Elena Kuo,
  • Christine Stewart,
  • Lisa Shulman,
  • Rebecca Parrish,
  • Ursula Whiteside,
  • Jennifer M Boggs,
  • Gregory E Simon,
  • Ali Rowhani-Rahbar,
  • Marian E Betz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/48007
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12
pp. e48007 – e48007

Abstract

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Abstract Background“Lock to Live” (L2L) is a novel web-based decision aid for helping people at risk of suicide reduce access to firearms. Researchers have demonstrated that L2L is feasible to use and acceptable to patients, but little is known about how to implement L2L during web-based mental health care and in-person contact with clinicians. ObjectiveThe goal of this project was to support the implementation and evaluation of L2L during routine primary care and mental health specialty web-based and in-person encounters. MethodsThe L2L implementation and evaluation took place at Kaiser Permanente Washington (KPWA)—a large, regional, nonprofit health care system. Three dimensions from the RE-AIM (Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, Maintenance) model—ReachAdoptionImplementation ResultsThe initial implementation consisted of updates for clinicians to add a URL and QR code referencing L2L to the safety planning EHR templates. Recommendations about introducing L2L were subsequently derived from the thematic analysis of semistructured interviews with patients (n=36), which included (1) “have an open conversation,” (2) “validate their situation,” (3) “share what to expect,” (4) “make it accessible and memorable,” and (5) “walk through the tool.” Clinicians’ interviews (n=30) showed a strong preference to have L2L included by default in the EHR-based safety planning template (in contrast to adding it manually). During the 2-year observation period, 2739 patients reported prior-month suicide attempt planning or intent and had a documented safety plan during the study period, including 745 (27.2%) who also received L2L. Over four 6-month subperiods of the observation period, L2L adoption rates increased substantially from 2% to 29% among primary care clinicians and from <1% to 48% among mental health clinicians. ConclusionsUnderstanding the value of L2L from users’ perspectives was essential for facilitating implementation and increasing patient reach and clinician adoption. Incorporating L2L into the existing system-level, EHR-based safety plan template reduced the effort to use L2L and was likely the most impactful implementation strategy. As rising suicide rates galvanize the urgency of prevention, the findings from this project, including L2L implementation tools and strategies, will support efforts to promote safety for suicide prevention in health care nationwide.