Is Suicide Training Sufficient for Psychology Trainees to Respond Appropriately to Suicidal Clients?
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Nicole M. Bromley, PsyD, is a 2012 graduate of the PsyD Program in Clinical Psychology at Antioch University New England.
Dissertation Committee
- Roger Peterson, Ph.D (Committee Chair)
- Lorraine Mangione, Ph.D (Committee Member)
- Robert Hubbell, Psy.D. (Committee Member)
Keywords
suicide, suicide training, psychology training, SIRI-2, training program
Document Type
Dissertation
Publication Date
2012
Abstract
This study reports the frequency of suicide training for current psychology trainees. Additionally,the research uses the Suicide Intervention Response Inventory - Second Edition (SIRI-2) to assess psychology trainees' ability to respond appropriately to suicidal clients. This study compares scores on the SIRI-2 between participants who are in pre-internship years of training and those currently in internship or having completed internship training. Finally, this study compares SIRI-2 scores between high training, low training, and no-training groups, as well as the scores of no-training versus training groups. Findings indicate no statistically significant difference in SIRI-2 scores between participants early in their programs and those who received training later in their programs. Also, the study shows no statistically significant difference between scores of high, low, and no-training groups. However, research found a statistically significant difference between no-training and training groups, indicating that any amount of training provided to students could increase their ability to respond appropriately to suicidal clients.
Recommended Citation
Bromley, N. M. (2012). Is Suicide Training Sufficient for Psychology Trainees to Respond Appropriately to Suicidal Clients?. https://aura.antioch.edu/etds/835