Application of a mobile health platform for assessing cognition and psychiatric symptoms in Veterans
Full Description
Suicide is a lethal problem for Veterans. A major challenge in predicting and preventing suicide is that ideation
and suicide behaviors fluctuate over time, as do the cognitive, emotional, and physical states that precede them.
Recent advances in mobile health technology hold promise for intensively measuring risk factors for suicide that
are proximal, time-varying, and occur naturalistically in daily life using smartphones. Cognitive factors - including
cognitive control and social cognition - play a role in suicide risk; to date, however, mobile health tools have not
been adopted to objectively measure cognitive performance fluctuations in Veterans. To address this gap, we
propose to use our previously developed mobile health tool for measuring cognitive control and social cognition
in the daily lives of Veterans with elevated suicide risk. Drawing on our experience delivering mobile health
assessments in individuals at-risk for suicide, we will examine the dynamic relationships between cognitive
performance and suicide, as well as other contextual variables associated with suicide risk. A transdiagnostic
sample of Veterans with current suicidal ideation will complete concurrent mobile cognitive tests (MCTs) and
ecological momentary assessments (EMA) within a two-week intensive assessment. Our aims are to identify
associations between cognitive test performance and constructs closely linked to suicide risk (restricted coping
ability, negative interpersonal beliefs, ideation). We also seek to examine how relationships established in the
intensive mobile health longitudinal dataset relate to real-world suicide outcomes which we will derive from the
electronic medical record and telehealth assessments. We will use the dataset to identify subtypes of Veterans
based on their temporal pattern of suicidal ideation and examine associations between subtypes and real-world
suicide outcomes. Finally, we will explore the role of specific context variables (e.g., sleep) in suicide risk.
Deliverables from this project will include an intensive longitudinal dataset that overcomes limitations of
traditional static laboratory-based assessments. This dataset can be leveraged to assess additional real-time
proximal risk factors associated with suicide in longitudinal studies and interventional research on the cognitive
underpinnings of suicide.
Grant Number: 5I01CX002485-03
NIH Institute/Center: VA
Principal Investigator: Jessica Bomyea
Sign up free to get the apply link, save to pipeline, and set email alerts.
Sign up free →Agency Plan
7-day free trialUnlock procurement & grants
Upgrade to access active tenders from World Bank, UNDP, ADB and more — with email alerts and pipeline tracking.
$29.99 / month
- 🔔Email alerts for new matching tenders
- 🗂️Track tenders in your pipeline
- 💰Filter by contract value
- 📥Export results to CSV
- 📌Save searches with one click