Adapting PC CARES to Continue Suicide Prevention in Rural Alaska During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Narrative Overview of an In-Person Community-Based Suicide Prevention Program Moving Online.

IF 1.9 4区 心理学 Q3 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL American Indian and Alaska Native Mental Health Research Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.5820/aian.2902.2022.126
Caroline C Wells, Lauren White, Tara Schmidt, Suzanne Rataj, Diane McEachern, Diane Wisnieski, Josie Garnie, Tanya Kirk, Roberta Moto, Lisa Wexler
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Abstract

This paper presents how a community mobilization program to prevent suicide was adapted to an online format to accommodate the impossibility of in-person delivery in Alaska Native communities during the COVID-19 pandemic. The intervention, Promoting Community Conversations About Research to End Suicide (PC CARES), was created collaboratively by researchers and Alaska Native communities with the goal of bringing community members together to create research-informed and community-led suicide prevention activities in their communities. To continue our work during the COVID-19 pandemic and restrictions, we adapted the PC CARES model to a synchronous remote delivery format. This shift included moving from predominantly Alaska Native participants to one of a mainly non-Native school staff audience. This required a pivot from Alaska Native self-determination toward cultural humility and community collaboration for school-based staff, with multilevel youth suicide prevention remaining the primary aim. This reorientation can offer important insight into how to build more responsive programs for those who are not from the communities they serve. Here, we provide a narrative overview of our collaborative adaptation process, illustrated by data collected during synchronous remote facilitation of the program, and reflect on how the shift in format and audience impacted program delivery and content. The adaptation process strove to maintain the core animating features of self-determination for Alaska Native communities and people as well as the translation of scientific knowledge to practice for greater impact.

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在COVID-19大流行期间,调整个人电脑护理以继续预防阿拉斯加农村的自杀:在线移动的面对面社区自杀预防计划的叙述概述。
本文介绍了如何将预防自杀的社区动员计划调整为在线形式,以适应COVID-19大流行期间阿拉斯加原住民社区无法亲自交付的情况。这项名为“促进社区关于结束自杀研究的对话”(PC CARES)的干预措施是由研究人员和阿拉斯加土著社区合作创建的,目的是将社区成员聚集在一起,在他们的社区创建研究信息和社区主导的自杀预防活动。为了在COVID-19大流行和限制期间继续开展工作,我们将PC CARES模式调整为同步远程交付格式。这种转变包括从以阿拉斯加原住民为主的学生转变为以非原住民为主的学生。这需要从阿拉斯加土著自决转向文化谦逊和学校工作人员的社区合作,多层次的青少年自杀预防仍然是主要目标。这种重新定位可以为如何为那些不是他们所服务社区的人建立更具响应性的项目提供重要的见解。在此,我们通过在节目同步远程促进过程中收集的数据,概述了我们的合作适应过程,并反思了形式和受众的转变如何影响节目的交付和内容。适应过程力求保持阿拉斯加土著社区和人民自决的核心生动特征,以及将科学知识转化为实践以产生更大的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
30.80%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: American Indian and Alaska Native Mental Health Research: The Journal of the National Center is a professionally refereed scientific journal. It contains empirical research, program evaluations, case studies, unpublished dissertations, and other articles in the behavioral, social, and health sciences which clearly relate to the mental health status of American Indians and Alaska Natives. All topical areas relating to this field are addressed, such as psychology, psychiatry, nursing, sociology, anthropology, social work, and specific areas of education, medicine, history, and law. Through a standardized format (American Psychological Association guidelines) new data regarding this special population is easier to retrieve, compare, and evaluate.
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