Exploring Parents’ Immediate Reactions to Digital Suicide Risk Alerts: Descriptive Study
Taylor A Burke, Alexandra H Bettis, Nehal Methi, Kathryn R Fox

TL;DR
This study explores how parents react emotionally and behaviorally when they receive digital alerts about their child's potential suicide risk, and how these alerts affect family relationships.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into parents' immediate emotional, cognitive, and behavioral responses to digital suicide risk alerts and their impact on family dynamics.
Findings
Parents reported experiencing negative emotions like nervousness and sadness upon receiving alerts.
Most parents felt closer to their child after the alert, and many took supportive actions like discussing mental health.
Parents were generally aligned with co-guardians in assessing and responding to their child's risk.
Abstract
Youth suicide is a critical public health crisis. Subscription-based parental digital monitoring apps have emerged to monitor youths’ web-based activities and promptly alert parents in case of detected suicide risk. Parents’ responses to digital suicide risk alerts could significantly influence their children’s immediate and long-term well-being. However, parent experiences receiving these alerts and their impact on parent–child and co-parent relationships remain unclear. This study aimed to examine parental perceptions of digital suicide risk alerts, as well as characterize parents’ emotional, cognitive, and behavioral responses to alert receipts, and evaluate the impact on their relationships with their child and co-parent. Parents subscribed to the MMGuardian app (Pervasive Group Inc) who received a suicide risk alert were invited to complete a web-based survey. The survey assessed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSuicide and Self-Harm Studies · Child and Adolescent Psychosocial and Emotional Development · Maternal Mental Health During Pregnancy and Postpartum
