Suicide Risk Screening in Jails: Protocol for a Pilot Study Leveraging the Mental Health Research Network Algorithm and Health Care Data
Erin B Comartin, Grant Victor, Athena Kheibari, Brian K Ahmedani, Bethany Hedden-Clayton, Richard N Jones, Ted R Miller, Jennifer E Johnson, Lauren M Weinstock, Sheryl Kubiak

TL;DR
This study aims to improve suicide risk screening in jails by testing a machine learning model using health care and jail data.
Contribution
The study validates an existing machine learning model for suicide risk detection in jails using real-world administrative data.
Findings
The ML model will be validated using data from 6000 individuals booked into two midwestern jails.
The model uses 313 demographic and clinical features from five years of health care data to detect suicide risk.
The study will compare the ML model's performance with current jail screening practices.
Abstract
Suicide in local jails occurs at a higher rate than in the general population, requiring improvements to risk screening methods. Current suicide risk screening practices in jails are insufficient: They are commonly not conducted using validated screening instruments, not collected by clinically trained professionals, and unlikely to capture honest responses due to the chaotic nature of booking areas. Therefore, new technologies could improve such practices. Several studies have indicated that machine learning (ML) models considerably improve accuracy and have positive predictive value in detecting suicide risk compared with practice as usual (PAU). This study will use administrative data and ML modeling to improve suicide risk detection at jail booking. This study is primarily focused on gathering preliminary information about the feasibility and practicality of using administrative…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSuicide and Self-Harm Studies · Traumatic Brain Injury Research · Psychopathy, Forensic Psychiatry, Sexual Offending
