P50MH129708
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
UW Practice-Based Suicide Prevention Research Center
In his proclamation for National Mental Health Awareness Month 2021, President Biden emphasized, "My administration is committed to advancing suicide prevention best practices and improving non-punitive crisis response." The University of Washington Practice-Based Suicide Prevention Research Center directly answers the President's call to action in outpatient medical settings through enhancing therapeutic alliance and increased self-efficacy of adolescent and young adult patients, their providers, and their families to manage suicide risk.
The Center's approach to improving outcomes across the suicide care pathway from identification of suicide risk through assessment to decision making and risk management, crisis response, treatment of suicidality, and long-term surveillance and follow-up is consistent with the recommendations of the Joint Commission, Zero Suicide, National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention, and the Surgeon General.
The Center, led by clinical researchers who treat suicidal patients in partnership with informatics researchers and operational experts, takes a stakeholder-based co-design approach integrating human-centered design (HCD) and multi-phasic optimization (MOST) to develop interventions for the outpatient medical setting. The Center represents a unique partnership between the School of Medicine's Departments of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Pediatrics and Family Medicine with Bioinformatics and Medical Education.
The Center also bridges UW's many resources: the Center for Suicide Prevention and Recovery, the Institute for Translational Health Sciences (the UW CTSA) and its Research Information Technology Team, and the AIMS Center (UW Implementation and Training Center for Collaborative Care). The Administrative Core will serve as the communication hub between Center Cores, our expert and three stakeholder advisory boards, the R03 Pilot Grant Program through which our collaborating scholars from other disciplines who are new to suicide prevention will receive mentoring, training, and experience.
The Signature Project (R01) will collaborate with pediatric medical settings to optimize treatment and maximize referrals to a brief outpatient crisis intervention as an alternative to emergency department referral. The AMPERE R34 Project will use the principles of HCD to create a clinically actionable pathway for ecological momentary assessment of suicide risk that is acceptable and usable for both young adult patients and their primary care providers. The ISSP R34 Project will adapt existing technology to use safety plan data to provide clinical decision support to healthcare providers in pediatric medical settings. The AM-COCM R34 Project will adapt the AESCHI model - core principles of care advocated by suicide experts - for collaborative care for adolescents and young adults in primary care clinics.
Research projects will work with the Methods Core to create point-of-care clinical decision support and electronic health record integration. The Methods Core will provide research infrastructure to the research projects, including common data elements and a data repository harmonized with electronic health records. The Center will conclude with a national policy briefing on Center findings to maximize dissemination.
In his proclamation for National Mental Health Awareness Month 2021, President Biden emphasized, "My administration is committed to advancing suicide prevention best practices and improving non-punitive crisis response." The University of Washington Practice-Based Suicide Prevention Research Center directly answers the President's call to action in outpatient medical settings through enhancing therapeutic alliance and increased self-efficacy of adolescent and young adult patients, their providers, and their families to manage suicide risk.
The Center's approach to improving outcomes across the suicide care pathway from identification of suicide risk through assessment to decision making and risk management, crisis response, treatment of suicidality, and long-term surveillance and follow-up is consistent with the recommendations of the Joint Commission, Zero Suicide, National Action Alliance for Suicide Prevention, and the Surgeon General.
The Center, led by clinical researchers who treat suicidal patients in partnership with informatics researchers and operational experts, takes a stakeholder-based co-design approach integrating human-centered design (HCD) and multi-phasic optimization (MOST) to develop interventions for the outpatient medical setting. The Center represents a unique partnership between the School of Medicine's Departments of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Pediatrics and Family Medicine with Bioinformatics and Medical Education.
The Center also bridges UW's many resources: the Center for Suicide Prevention and Recovery, the Institute for Translational Health Sciences (the UW CTSA) and its Research Information Technology Team, and the AIMS Center (UW Implementation and Training Center for Collaborative Care). The Administrative Core will serve as the communication hub between Center Cores, our expert and three stakeholder advisory boards, the R03 Pilot Grant Program through which our collaborating scholars from other disciplines who are new to suicide prevention will receive mentoring, training, and experience.
The Signature Project (R01) will collaborate with pediatric medical settings to optimize treatment and maximize referrals to a brief outpatient crisis intervention as an alternative to emergency department referral. The AMPERE R34 Project will use the principles of HCD to create a clinically actionable pathway for ecological momentary assessment of suicide risk that is acceptable and usable for both young adult patients and their primary care providers. The ISSP R34 Project will adapt existing technology to use safety plan data to provide clinical decision support to healthcare providers in pediatric medical settings. The AM-COCM R34 Project will adapt the AESCHI model - core principles of care advocated by suicide experts - for collaborative care for adolescents and young adults in primary care clinics.
Research projects will work with the Methods Core to create point-of-care clinical decision support and electronic health record integration. The Methods Core will provide research infrastructure to the research projects, including common data elements and a data repository harmonized with electronic health records. The Center will conclude with a national policy briefing on Center findings to maximize dissemination.
Awardee
Funding Goals
THE MISSION OF THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF MENTAL HEALTH (NIMH) IS TO TRANSFORM THE UNDERSTANDING AND TREATMENT OF MENTAL ILLNESSES THROUGH BASIC AND CLINICAL RESEARCH, PAVING THE WAY FOR PREVENTION, RECOVERY, AND CURE. IN MAY 2020, NIMH RELEASED ITS NEW STRATEGIC PLAN FOR RESEARCH. THE NEW STRATEGIC PLAN BUILDS ON THE SUCCESSES OF PREVIOUS NIMH STRATEGIC PLANS BY PROVIDING A FRAMEWORK FOR SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH AND EXPLORATION, AND ADDRESSING NEW CHALLENGES IN MENTAL HEALTH. THE NEW STRATEGIC PLAN OUTLINES FOUR HIGH-LEVEL GOALS: GOAL 1: DEFINE THE BRAIN MECHANISMS UNDERLYING COMPLEX BEHAVIORS GOAL 2: EXAMINE MENTAL ILLNESS TRAJECTORIES ACROSS THE LIFESPAN GOAL 3: STRIVE FOR PREVENTION AND CURES GOAL 4: STRENGTHEN THE PUBLIC HEALTH IMPACT OF NIMH-SUPPORTED RESEARCH THESE FOUR GOALS FORM A BROAD ROADMAP FOR THE INSTITUTE'S RESEARCH PRIORITIES OVER THE NEXT FIVE YEARS, BEGINNING WITH THE FUNDAMENTAL SCIENCE OF THE BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR, AND EXTENDING THROUGH EVIDENCE-BASED SERVICES THAT IMPROVE PUBLIC HEALTH OUTCOMES. THE INSTITUTE'S OVERALL FUNDING STRATEGY IS TO SUPPORT A BROAD SPECTRUM OF INVESTIGATOR-INITIATED RESEARCH IN FUNDAMENTAL SCIENCE, WITH INCREASING USE OF INSTITUTE-SOLICITED INITIATIVES FOR APPLIED RESEARCH WHERE PUBLIC HEALTH IMPACT IS A SHORT-TERM MEASURE OF SUCCESS. THE NEW STRATEGIC PLAN ALSO ADDRESSES A NUMBER OF CROSS-CUTTING THEMES THAT ARE RELEVANT TO ALL RESEARCH SUPPORTED BY NIMH, THESE THEMES HIGHLIGHT AREAS WHERE NIMH-FUNDED SCIENCE MAY HAVE THE GREATEST IMPACT, BRIDGE GAPS, AND OFFER NOVEL APPROACHES TO ACCELERATE ADVANCES IN MENTAL HEALTH RESEARCH. FOR EXAMPLE, NIMH VALUES A COMPREHENSIVE RESEARCH AGENDA THAT TAKES AN INCLUSIVE APPROACH THAT ENSURES RESEARCH INTERESTS ARE VARIED, MAINTAIN DIVERSE PARTICIPATION AND PARTNERSHIPS, AND ACHIEVE RESEARCH GOALS ACROSS MULTIPLE TIMEFRAMES. THIS INCLUDES DIVERSE METHODOLOGIES, TOOLS, AND MODELS, RESEARCH ADDRESSING COMPLEX BASIC, TRANSLATIONAL, AND APPLIED QUESTIONS, RESEARCH INCLUDING BOTH SEXES AND, AS APPROPRIATE, GENETIC BACKGROUND, AND, PARTICIPANTS FROM DIVERSE RACIAL AND ETHNIC BACKGROUNDS, AND ACROSS GENDER IDENTITIES, GEOGRAPHICAL CONTEXT, SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS, NEUROTYPE, AND AGE OFFERING THE BEST POSSIBLE REPRESENTATION, FOR THE BROADEST NUMBER OF INDIVIDUALS WHO MAY ULTIMATELY BENEFIT FROM THESE SCIENTIFIC ADVANCES. TO ACCOMPLISH THE GOALS OUTLINED IN THE NEW STRATEGIC PLAN, NIMH WILL SUPPORT RESEARCH THAT AIMS: TO CHARACTERIZE THE GENOMIC, MOLECULAR, CELLULAR, AND CIRCUIT COMPONENTS CONTRIBUTING TO BRAIN ORGANIZATION AND FUNCTION, TO IDENTIFY THE DEVELOPMENTAL, FUNCTIONAL, AND REGULATORY MECHANISMS RELEVANT TO COGNITIVE, AFFECTIVE, AND SOCIAL DOMAINS, ACROSS UNITS OF ANALYSIS, AND, TO GENERATE AND VALIDATE NOVEL TOOLS, TECHNIQUES, AND MEASURES TO QUANTIFY CHANGES IN THE ACTIVITY OF MOLECULES, CELLS, CIRCUITS, AND CONNECTOMES. TO DISCOVER GENE VARIANTS AND OTHER GENOMIC ELEMENTS THAT CONTRIBUTE TO THE DEVELOPMENT OF MENTAL ILLNESSES IN DIVERSE POPULATIONS, TO ADVANCE OUR UNDERSTANDING OF THE COMPLEX ETIOLOGY OF MENTAL ILLNESSES USING MOLECULAR EPIDEMIOLOGIC APPROACHES THAT INCORPORATE INDIVIDUAL GENETIC INFORMATION IN LARGE COHORTS, TO ELUCIDATE HOW HUMAN GENETIC VARIATION AFFECTS THE COORDINATION OF MOLECULAR, CELLULAR, AND PHYSIOLOGICAL NETWORKS SUPPORTING HIGHER-ORDER FUNCTIONS AND EMERGENT PROPERTIES OF NEUROBIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS, AND, TO DEVELOP NOVEL TOOLS AND TECHNIQUES FOR THE ANALYSIS OF LARGE-SCALE GENETIC, MULTI-OMIC DATA AS IT APPLIES TO MENTAL HEALTH. TO UTILIZE CONNECTOMIC APPROACHES TO IDENTIFY BRAIN NETWORKS AND CIRCUIT COMPONENTS THAT CONTRIBUTE TO VARIOUS ASPECTS OF MENTAL FUNCTION AND DYSFUNCTION, TO DETERMINE THROUGH BRAIN-WIDE ANALYSIS HOW CHANGES IN THE PHYSIOLOGICAL PROPERTIES OF MOLECULES, CELLS, AND CIRCUITS CONTRIBUTE TO MENTAL ILLNESSES, TO DEVELOP MOLECULAR, CELLULAR, AND CIRCUIT-LEVEL BIOMARKERS OF IMPAIRED NEURAL FUNCTION IN HUMANS, AND, TO DEVELOP INNOVATIVE TECHNOLOGIES, INCLUDING NEW IMAGING, COMPUTATIONAL, PHARMACOLOGICAL, AND GENETIC TOOLS TO INTERROGATE AND MODULATE CIRCUIT ACTIVITY AND STRUCTURE ALTERED IN MENTAL ILLNESSES. TO ELUCIDATE THE MECHANISMS CONTRIBUTING TO THE TRAJECTORIES OF BRAIN DEVELOPMENT AND BEHAVIOR, AND, TO CHARACTERIZE THE EMERGENCE AND PROGRESSION OF MENTAL ILLNESSES, AND IDENTIFYING SENSITIVE PERIODS FOR OPTIMAL INTERVENTION. TO DETERMINE EARLY RISK AND PROTECTIVE FACTORS, AND RELATED MECHANISMS, TO SERVE AS NOVEL INTERVENTION GROUPS, AND, TO DEVELOP RELIABLE AND ROBUST BIOMARKERS AND ASSESSMENT TOOLS TO PREDICT ILLNESS ONSET, COURSE, AND ACROSS DIVERSE POPULATIONS. TO DEVELOP NOVEL INTERVENTIONS USING A MECHANISM-INFORMED, EXPERIMENTAL THERAPEUTICS APPROACH, AND, TO DEVELOP AND IMPLEMENT MEASUREMENT STRATEGIES TO FACILITATE MECHANISM-BASED INTERVENTION DEVELOPMENT AND TESTING. TO INVESTIGATE PERSONALIZED INTERVENTION STRATEGIES ACROSS DISEASE PROGRESSION AND DEVELOPMENT, AND, TO DEVELOP AND REFINE COMPUTATIONAL APPROACHES AND RESEARCH DESIGNS THAT CAN BE USED TO INFORM AND TEST PERSONALIZED INTERVENTIONS. TO DEVELOP AND TEST APPROACHES FOR ADAPTING, COMBINING, AND SEQUENCING INTERVENTIONS TO ACHIEVE THE GREATEST IMPACT ON THE LIVES AND FUNCTIONING OF PERSONS SEEKING CARE, TO CONDUCT EFFICIENT PRAGMATIC TRIALS THAT EMPLOY NEW TOOLS TO RAPIDLY IDENTIFY, ENGAGE, ASSESS, AND FOLLOW PARTICIPANTS IN THE CONTEXT OF ROUTINE CARE, AND, TO ENHANCE THE PRACTICAL RELEVANCE OF EFFECTIVENESS RESEARCH VIA DEPLOYMENT-FOCUSED, HYBRID, EFFECTIVENESS-IMPLEMENTATION STUDIES. TO EMPLOY ASSESSMENT PLATFORMS WITHIN HEALTHCARE SYSTEMS TO ACCURATELY ASSESS THE DISTRIBUTION AND DETERMINANTS OF MENTAL ILLNESSES AND TO INFORM STRATEGIES FOR IMPROVED SERVICES, TO OPTIMIZE REAL-WORLD DATA COLLECTION SYSTEMS TO IDENTIFY STRATEGIES FOR IMPROVING ACCESS, QUALITY, EFFECTIVENESS, AND CONTINUITY OF MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES, AND, TO COMPARE ALTERNATIVE FINANCING MODELS TO PROMOTE EFFECTIVE AND EFFICIENT CARE FOR INDIVIDUALS WITH SERIOUS EMOTIONAL DISTURBANCES AND SERIOUS MENTAL ILLNESSES. TO STRENGTHEN PARTNERSHIPS WITH KEY STAKEHOLDERS TO DEVELOP AND VALIDATE STRATEGIES FOR IMPLEMENTING, SUSTAINING, AND CONTINUOUSLY IMPROVE EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICES, TO BUILD MODELS TO SCALE-UP EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICES FOR USE IN PUBLIC AND PRIVATE PRIMARY CARE, SPECIALTY CARE AND OTHER SETTINGS, AND, TO DEVELOP DECISION-SUPPORT TOOLS AND TECHNOLOGIES THAT INCREASE THE EFFECTIVENESS AND CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT OF MENTAL HEALTH INTERVENTIONS IN PUBLIC AND PRIVATE PRIMARY CARE, SPECIALTY CARE, AND OTHER SETTINGS. TO ADAPT, VALIDATE, AND SCALE-UP PROGRAMS CURRENTLY IN USE THAT IMPROVE MENTAL HEALTH SERVICES FOR UNDERSERVED POPULATIONS, TO DEVELOP AND VALIDATE SERVICE DELIVERY MODELS THAT PROVIDE EVIDENCE-BASED CARE FOR INDIVIDUALS THROUGHOUT THE COURSE OF MENTAL ILLNESS, TO DEVELOP AND VALIDATE SYSTEMS-LEVEL STRATEGIES USING TECHNOLOGY AND OTHER APPROACHES, TO IDENTIFY, SUPPORT, AND MONITOR THE EFFECTIVENESS OF EVIDENCE-BASED CARE THROUGHOUT THE COURSE OF ILLNESS, AND, TO DEVELOP AND VALIDATE DECISION-MAKING MODELS THAT BRIDGE MENTAL HEALTH, MEDICAL, AND OTHER CARE SETTINGS TO INTEGRATE THE APPROPRIATE CARE FOR PEOPLE WITH SERIOUS MENTAL ILLNESSES AND COMORBID MEDICAL CONDITIONS.
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
Washington
United States
Geographic Scope
State-Wide
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 46% from $6,644,364 to $9,691,872.
University Of Washington was awarded
UW Suicide Prevention Research: Enhancing Outpatient Care
Project Grant P50MH129708
worth $9,691,872
from the National Institute of Mental Health in February 2023 with work to be completed primarily in Washington United States.
The grant
has a duration of 5 years and
was awarded through assistance program 93.242 Mental Health Research Grants.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity Practice-Based Suicide Prevention Research Centers (P50 Clinical Trial Optional).
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 8/20/25
Period of Performance
2/17/23
Start Date
1/31/28
End Date
Funding Split
$9.7M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$9.7M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Transaction History
Modifications to P50MH129708
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
P50MH129708
SAI Number
P50MH129708-1851547901
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Public/State Controlled Institution Of Higher Education
Awarding Office
75N700 NIH National Institute of Mental Health
Funding Office
75N700 NIH National Institute of Mental Health
Awardee UEI
HD1WMN6945W6
Awardee CAGE
1HEX5
Performance District
WA-90
Senators
Maria Cantwell
Patty Murray
Patty Murray
Budget Funding
Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|---|
National Institute of Mental Health, National Institutes of Health, Health and Human Services (075-0892) | Health research and training | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $3,322,182 | 100% |
Modified: 8/20/25