Susan Rasmussen1, Keith Hawton2, Sion Philpott-Morgan1, Rory C O'Connor3. 1. 1 School of Psychological Sciences and Health, University of Strathclyde, Glasgow, UK. 2. 2 Centre for Suicide Research, University Department of Psychiatry, Warnford Hospital, Oxford, UK. 3. 3 Suicidal Behaviour Research Laboratory, Institute of Health and Wellbeing, College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Given the high rates of self-harm among adolescents, recent research has focused on a better understanding of the motives for the behavior. AIMS: The present study had three aims: to investigate (a) which motives are most frequently endorsed by adolescents who report self-harm; (b) whether motives reported at baseline predict repetition of self-harm over a 6-month period; and (c) whether self-harm motives differ between boys and girls. METHOD: In all, 987 school pupils aged 14-16 years completed a lifestyle and coping questionnaire at two time points 6 months apart that recorded self-harm and the associated motives. RESULTS: The motive "to get relief from a terrible state of mind" was the most commonly endorsed reason for self-harm (in boys and girls). Interpersonal reasons (e.g., "to frighten someone") were least commonly endorsed. Regression analyses showed that adolescents who endorsed wanting to get relief from a terrible state of mind at baseline were significantly more likely to repeat self-harm at follow-up than those adolescents who did not cite this motive. CONCLUSION: The results highlight the complex nature of self-harm. They have implications for mental health provision in educational settings, especially in relation to encouraging regulation of emotions and help-seeking.
BACKGROUND: Given the high rates of self-harm among adolescents, recent research has focused on a better understanding of the motives for the behavior. AIMS: The present study had three aims: to investigate (a) which motives are most frequently endorsed by adolescents who report self-harm; (b) whether motives reported at baseline predict repetition of self-harm over a 6-month period; and (c) whether self-harm motives differ between boys and girls. METHOD: In all, 987 school pupils aged 14-16 years completed a lifestyle and coping questionnaire at two time points 6 months apart that recorded self-harm and the associated motives. RESULTS: The motive "to get relief from a terrible state of mind" was the most commonly endorsed reason for self-harm (in boys and girls). Interpersonal reasons (e.g., "to frighten someone") were least commonly endorsed. Regression analyses showed that adolescents who endorsed wanting to get relief from a terrible state of mind at baseline were significantly more likely to repeat self-harm at follow-up than those adolescents who did not cite this motive. CONCLUSION: The results highlight the complex nature of self-harm. They have implications for mental health provision in educational settings, especially in relation to encouraging regulation of emotions and help-seeking.
Authors: David Mou; Evan M Kleiman; Szymon Fedor; Stuart Beck; Jeff C Huffman; Matthew K Nock Journal: J Psychiatr Res Date: 2018-08-03 Impact factor: 4.791