# Innovations in Suicide Prevention Research (INSPIRE)

> **NIH NIH R01** · UNIV OF NORTH CAROLINA CHAPEL HILL · 2022 · $733,928

## Abstract

ABSTRACT
 Despite intensive prevention efforts from federal and state agencies, suicide is now the 10th leading cause
of mortality overall in the US, increasing steadily over the past two decades and claiming more than 47,000
lives in 2017. The impact of suicide is particularly high among vulnerable populations such as adolescents and
formerly incarcerated individuals. Suicide attempts also exact a high emotional, physical, and economic toll.
 Although much research has focused on causes and predictors of death from suicide, progress in suicide
prevention has been hampered by data linkage and methodological challenges. While national mortality rates
are known, entities with the potential to implement large suicide prevention initiatives – health systems,
insurers, and departments of corrections – lack the linked data to monitor suicide incidence in their
populations, establish benchmarks, and establish an evaluation framework for prevention efforts. Many
individuals who die from suicide have had recent contact with a health care, health insurance, or correctional
system, representing critical missed opportunities to implement suicide prevention measures.
 Two key needs are highlighted by the present RFA: linked surveillance systems that integrate healthcare,
insurer (private and public), and correctional data with mortality outcomes to provide a framework for
implementing and evaluating suicide prevention initiatives, and large and adequately powered datasets with
rich health care access information over an extended period, matched with rigorous study designs for
observational data. Therefore, our objective in the current proposal is to establish an in-depth suicide
surveillance system linking multiple large, comprehensive databases and use that system to define suicide
mortality benchmarks, identify predictors of suicide risk, generate risk prediction tools, evaluate suicide
prevention efforts, and establish long-term workflow protocols to sustain the surveillance system. Our team is
uniquely positioned to address these needs through our deep expertise in suicide, mental health, and health
care utilization research; our extensive experience in application of rigorous epidemiological methods to large
linked databases; our established access to comprehensive, regularly updated databases representing health
care encounters, public and private insurance claims, corrections data, and suicide deaths in one of the most
populous states in the US; and our successful work in prior projects to link all of these databases at the
individual level using all appropriate safeguards and security measures.
 This project will be the first to link these large state- and healthcare system-level databases to establish an
ongoing suicide surveillance system to identify short and long term predictors of suicide and to inform and
evaluate suicide prevention efforts in North Carolina and across the United States. We anticipate such suicide
prevention efforts will get emb...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10449342
- **Project number:** 5R01MH124752-03
- **Recipient organization:** UNIV OF NORTH CAROLINA CHAPEL HILL
- **Principal Investigator:** Brian W Pence
- **Activity code:** R01 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2022
- **Award amount:** $733,928
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2020-09-09 → 2024-06-30

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10449342

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10449342, Innovations in Suicide Prevention Research (INSPIRE) (5R01MH124752-03). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-25 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10449342. Licensed CC0.

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