Open Access
Open access
BJPsych Open, volume 11, issue 2, publication number e61

Understanding the lived experience and support needs of parents of suicidal adolescents to inform an online parenting programme: qualitative study

Alice Cao
Ling Wu
Mairead C Cardamone-Breen
Chloe A Salvaris
Patrick Olivier
Anthony F. Jorm
Marie BH Yap
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2025-03-19
Journal: BJPsych Open
scimago Q1
SJR1.458
CiteScore6.3
Impact factor3.9
ISSN20564724
Abstract
Background

Suicidal ideation and behaviours are common among adolescents, posing significant challenges. Parents have a protective role in mitigating this risk, yet they often feel ill-equipped to support their adolescents, and their specific support needs are not well understood.

Aims

To explore the lived experiences of parents with suicidal adolescents and identify their support needs in the context of a therapist-assisted online parenting programme.

Method

Semi-structured interviews were conducted with three stakeholder groups based in Australia: nine parents with lived experience caring for a suicidal adolescent, five young people who experienced suicidality during adolescence and five clinical/research experts in youth mental health/suicide prevention. Inductive thematic analysis was used to analyse and interpret findings.

Results

Three key themes highlight the experience of parenting a suicidal adolescent: the traumatising emotional experience, uncertainty and parent empowerment. Six themes described parents’ support needs: validation and support, practical and tailored strategies, rebuilding the parent–adolescent relationship, parental self-care, flexible and accessible modes of delivery, and understanding non-suicidal self-injury.

Conclusions

Findings highlight key themes of parenting a suicidal adolescent and parental support needs. An online parenting programme could offer parents flexible access to evidence-based parenting strategies. Yet, a purely digital approach may not address the complexities of the parent-adolescent dynamic and provide adequate tailoring. As such, a hybrid approach incorporating therapist support can provide parents with both the compassionate support and practical guidance they seek.

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