A Novel Peer-Delivered Recovery-Focused Suicide Prevention Intervention for Veterans With Serious Mental Illness
This study is recruiting. It focuses on bipolarity and currently lists participation information in the United States.
Key information made simple
What is this study testing?
This study is testing whether SUicide Prevention by Peers Offering Recovery Tactics may be useful for adults experiencing bipolarity.
What would participation involve?
Participants may take part in SUicide Prevention by Peers Offering Recovery Tactics, complete questionnaires or follow-up assessments, attend study visits with the research team. The registry lists locations in United States.
Who is it mainly for?
This study appears to be mainly for adults with bipolarity.
What should you check before joining?
Ask about how many sessions are required and who delivers them, whether there is a comparison group, how many visits or travel steps are needed, the exact eligibility criteria.
Your next step
The official record suggests in-person participation through a research setting, with sites including VA San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego, CA in San Diego. Participation appears to involve questionnaires, interviews, or regular check-ins about day-to-day experience. The main fit is usually matching the main diagnosis and being able to understand the study and consent, while common reasons not to take part include active substance or alcohol problems that could affect the results and other factors that could make participation unsuitable. The official record does not list a formal phase, which usually means this is focused more on feasibility, delivery, or support than a standard numbered clinical-trial phase.
Questions to ask before joining
- What are the exact eligibility criteria, and what could exclude someone?
- How many visits, assessments, or follow-ups are expected, and over what period?
- What risks, side effects, practical burdens, or alternatives should be understood first?
- Who should be contacted to confirm locations, timing, compensation, and next steps?
Things to check before joining
- Recruitment status
- Recruiting
- Estimated enrollment
- Not clearly listed
- Sponsor
- VA Office of Research and Development
- Sponsor type
- Government agency
- Study type
- Behavioral
- Intervention type
- Psychotherapy / behavioral intervention
- Study phase
- Not clearly listed
- Locations
- United States
- Age range
- Over 18 Years
- Official registry ID
- NCT05537376
- Official title
- A Novel Peer-Delivered Recovery-Focused Suicide Prevention Intervention for Veterans With Serious Mental Illness
- Official source
- Official registry link
Want help reviewing this study?
For you
Taking part may help test a support approach in real life.
It requires regular follow-up, often through questionnaires or interviews.
Requires travel, with in-person participation in United States.
Not medical advice
Information from public sources. Are you the study sponsor? Contact us to update this page: hi@hopestage.com
Questions about this study
What is this study trying to understand?
This study is exploring digital app or tool for people with bipolarity. Participants may complete study visits, assessments, or follow-up activities defined by the research team. Direct benefit is not guaranteed. The detailed objective is not always clearly listed in the public registry; the study team can confirm.
What is a behavioral study?
This appears to be a behavioral / psychological / psychosocial study involving SUicide Prevention by Peers Offering Recovery Tactics. Phase is mainly useful to check for medication studies and some device studies.
Do I need to want to stop or reduce tobacco use to participate?
The public registry appears to mention tobacco, nicotine, alcohol, cannabis, or another addiction-related topic. Ask the study team whether you need to want to stop, reduce, already be abstinent, or simply meet use-related criteria. Eligibility must be confirmed by the study team.
What would I likely need to do?
You may take part in sessions or exercises related to habits, thoughts, emotions, or behaviors. The listed study locations suggest that at least part of participation may involve a physical site. Ask whether some steps can be done remotely.
Could this study affect my mood, habits, motivation, or stress?
Behavioral studies can involve habits, emotions, motivation, stress, sleep, or ways of thinking. Ask whether the intervention could affect your mood or stress, and who to contact if you feel worse. For any mental health study, also ask who to contact if you feel worse, whether participation may affect current treatment, whether you can stop, and who confirms eligibility.
Will I need to travel or attend in-person visits?
The listed study locations suggest that at least part of participation may involve a physical site. Ask which sites are open, how many visits are expected, whether any steps can be done remotely, and whether travel costs or compensation are listed.
Who is behind this study?
This study is sponsored by VA Office of Research and Development, which appears to be a government agency. The listed contact or investigator is VA Office of Research and Development, affiliated with VA Office of Research and Development. Sponsor website: https://www.research.va.gov. If available, it can be useful to check the sponsor website, collaborators, investigator affiliation, and the official registry before deciding. HopeStage does not judge the quality of a sponsor or researcher, but helps you identify what to verify.
Can I still join this study?
The registry indicates that this study is currently recruiting. This does not mean you are eligible: the study team must confirm the criteria, available locations, and next steps.
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