Currently submitted to: JMIR Mental Health
Date Submitted: Mar 7, 2024
Open Peer Review Period: Mar 7, 2024 - May 2, 2024
(currently open for review)
Warning: This is an author submission that is not peer-reviewed or edited. Preprints - unless they show as "accepted" - should not be relied on to guide clinical practice or health-related behavior and should not be reported in news media as established information.
Conversational congruence analysis of crisis helplines: talk-time differences between interregional and intraregional calls
ABSTRACT
Background:
National suicide prevention strategies are general population-based approaches to prevent suicide by promoting help-seeking behaviours and implementing interventions. Crisis helplines are one of the suicide prevention resources available for public use where individuals experiencing a crisis can talk to a trained volunteer. Samaritans UK operates on a national scale, with a number of branches located in within each of the UK’s four countries or regions.
Objective:
The aim of this study is to determine the impact of calls answered in the same region as the caller, compared to calls answered in a different region on the duration of calls made from landlines to Samaritans UK.
Methods:
Calls may be routed In Samaritans, the telephony system sends the call to the next available volunteer, irrespective of location, therefore individuals may be routed to a branch within the same region as the caller’s current region (intra-regional calls) or routed to a branch that is in a different region from that of the caller’s current region (inter-regional calls). The origin of calls by region was identified using the landline prefix of the anonymised caller identifier, along with the region of the destination branch (as branch is recorded in the call details record).
Results:
A one-way analysis showed that there are significant differences in call durations between intraregional calls and interregional calls (p<0.001). Across all conditions within this study, callers stayed on the phone for a shorter period of time when routed to a branch that is within the same region as the call origin, than if they were put through to a branch within a different region than the call origin.
Conclusions:
Possible interpretations and practical implications are discussed.
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