| Literature DB >> 27815757 |
Joanna Lockwood1,2, David Daley3,4, Ellen Townsend5, Kapil Sayal3,4.
Abstract
Research supports an association between impulsivity and self-harm, yet inconsistencies in methodology across studies have complicated understanding of this relationship. This systematic review examines the association between impulsivity and self-harm in community-based adolescents aged 11-25 years and aims to integrate findings according to differing concepts and methods. Electronic searches of EMBASE, MEDLINE, PsychINFO, CINAHL, PubMed and The Cochrane Library, and manual searches of reference lists of relevant reviews identified 4496 articles published up to July 2015, of which 28 met inclusion criteria. Twenty-four of the studies reported an association between broadly specified impulsivity and self-harm. However, findings varied according to the conception and measurement of impulsivity and the precision with which self-harm behaviours were specified. Specifically, lifetime non-suicidal self-injury was most consistently associated with mood-based impulsivity-related traits. However, cognitive facets of impulsivity (relating to difficulties maintaining focus or acting without forethought) differentiated current self-harm from past self-harm. These facets also distinguished those with thoughts of self-harm (ideation) from those who acted on thoughts (enaction). The findings suggested that mood-based impulsivity is related to the initiation of self-harm, while cognitive facets of impulsivity are associated with the maintenance of self-harm. In addition, behavioural impulsivity is most relevant to self-harm under conditions of negative affect. Collectively, the findings indicate that distinct impulsivity facets confer unique risks across the life-course of self-harm. From a clinical perspective, the review suggests that interventions focusing on reducing rash reactivity to emotions or improving self-regulation and decision making may offer most benefit in supporting those who self-harm.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescence; Impulsivity; Non-suicidal self-injury; Self-harm; Urgency
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27815757 PMCID: PMC5364241 DOI: 10.1007/s00787-016-0915-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry ISSN: 1018-8827 Impact factor: 4.785
Fig. 1PRISMA diagram showing study selection process
Characteristics of studies included in the systematic review
| Study/country | Population | Measurement | Nature of relationship | Quality score | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Source | Gender/age/ethnicity | Impulsivity | NSSI/self-harm | |||
| NSSI studies | ||||||
| Allen and Hooley [ | Online experiment |
| SNAP | Single question. | NSSI group did not report higher levels of trait impulsivity compared to controls, but did demonstrate poorer inhibitory control over | 4 (moderate) |
| Arens and Gaher [ | Uni/college concurrent |
| UPPS-R | DSHI | NSSI positively correlated with NUR [ | 6 (good) |
| Bresin et al. [ | Uni/college EMA diary |
| UPPS-R | DHSI | For individuals high in NUR, high daily sadness was a significant predictor of increased NSSI urge (OR 3.93). So was upset, and fear, but not daily negative affect or guilt | 6 (good) |
| Claes and Muehlenkamp [ | High schools concurrent |
| UPPS-P | SIQ-TR | NSSI positively correlated with NUR (rs = .29) and PUR (rs = .18). LPM positively correlated with severe cutting | 5 (moderate) |
| Di Pierro et al. [ | High school concurrent |
| Youth questionnaire | SIQ-TR | Impulsivity (lack of premeditation) positively associated with | 6 (good) |
| Di Pierro et al. [ | High school concurrent |
| Youth questionnaire | SIQ-TR | Impulsivity (lack of premeditation) moderated the association between negative-high-arousal states before and after NSSI | 5 (moderate) |
| Dir et al. [ | Uni/college concurrent |
| UPPS-P | DHSI | DSH group was significantly higher than the non-DSH group on LPM ( | 7 (good) |
| Fikke et al. [ | High school experiment |
| Stop-signal task | FASM. 2 incidents of | Those with low NSSI had overall higher scores than controls | 5 (moderate) |
| Glenn and Klonsky [ | Uni/college concurrent |
| UPPS (short) | ISAS | Those who self-injured differed from controls on NUR | 6 (good) |
| Glenn and Klonsky [ | Uni/college longitudinal |
| UPPS (short) | ISAS |
| 6 (good) |
| Liang et al. [ | School concurrent |
| BIS-11 (Chinese) | Self-harm questionnaire |
| 5 (moderate) |
| Liu and Mustanski [ | Online longitudinal |
| BIS-11; BSSS | ARBA. Single item | Multivariate HLM of predictors of NSSI revealed greater | 5 (moderate) |
| Mullins-Sweatt et al. [ | Uni/college concurrent |
| UPPS-P | DHSI | NSSI group reported higher NUR ( | 4 (moderate) |
| Ogle and Clements [ | Uni/college concurrent |
| UPPS-R | DSHI | In univariate tests those engaging in NSSI were significantly higher in NUR ( | 4 (moderate) |
| Peterson et al. [ | Uni/college concurrent |
| UPPS-R | DHSI short-form | NUR predicted NSSI engagement (OR 1.047). A three-way interaction was found between NUR, DT and depression with high NUR + depression predicting higher levels of NSSI in those with low DT. A main effect of LPM was found but no interaction effect | 7 (good) |
| Peterson and Fischer [ | Uni/college longitudinal |
| UPPS-R | DHSI short-form | At baseline direct paths from NUR to NSSI were significant | 4 (moderate) |
| Taylor et al. [ | Uni/college concurrent |
| UPPS-R | DSHI short-form | Main effect for NUR ( | 4 (moderate) |
| Rodav et al. [ | School concurrent |
| BIS-11 (Hebrew) | OSI-F— | Those reporting NSSI had higher impulsivity compared to controls ( | 7 (good) |
| Self-harm studies | ||||||
| De Leo and Helier [ | School concurrent |
| Plutchik short form (6 items) | CASE LCQ | Impulsivity was associated with past-year self-harm in univariate analysis. No association found in multivariate analysis. Time to engage measures showed that more than a third engaged in SH less than an hour after first thinking about it | 7 (good) |
| Hawton et al. [ | School concurrent |
| Plutchik short form (6 items) | CASE LCQ | Impulsivity was associated with | 7 (good) |
| Madge et al. [ | School concurrent |
| Plutchik short form (6 items) | CASE LCQ | Increased severity of self-harm history associated with greater impulsivity. Impulsivity was independently associated with self-harm thoughts only (OR 1.06), single episode (OR 1.10), multiple episode (OR 1.13). Only impulsivity among psychological correlates distinguished ideation from single episode self-harm | 7 (good) |
| McMahon et al. [ | School concurrent |
| Plutchik short form (6 items) | CASE LCQ. |
| 7 (good) |
| O’Connor et al. [ | School concurrent |
| Plutchik short form (6 items) | Modified version of CASE LCQ | In univariate analysis increased impulsivity was associated with | 7 (good) |
| O’Connor et al. [ | School concurrent |
| Plutchik short form (6 items) | Modified version of CASE LCQ |
| 7 (good) |
| O’Connor et al. [ | School concurrent |
| Plutchik short form (2 items) | Modified version of CASE LCQ |
| 6 (good) |
| O’Connor et al. [ | School longitudinal |
| Plutchik short form (6 items) | Modified version of CASE LCQ | In univariate analysis impulsivity at baseline was not associated with first time self-harm between T1 and T2 or with repeat self-harm between T1 and T2. But those who failed to complete measures at T2 were significantly more impulsive than completers | 7 (good) |
| Portzky et al. [ | School concurrent |
| Plutchik short form (6 items) | CASE LCQ | In univariate analysis impulsivity was significantly associated with | 7 (good) |
| Rawlings et al. [ | Uni/college concurrent |
| BIS-11 and UPPS-P | Two questions | No relationship between (BIS-11, LPM and LPS) and self-harm. Affective impulsivity (NUR/PUR) higher in those reporting self-harm (OR 2.0). Relationship between affective impulsivity and SH mediated by depression/anxiety | 7 (good) |
SNAP schedule for nonadaptive and adaptive personality—2 [22], SIQ-TR self-Injury questionnaire treatment related [79], ISAS inventory of statements about self-injury [12], FASM functional assessment of self-mutilation [36], ARBA aids-risk-related behaviour among adolescents [80], OSI-F Ottawa self-injury inventory functions [81], DSHI deliberate self-harm inventory [82], BSSS brief sensation seeking scale [24], LCQ lifestyle and coping questionnaire, UPPS facets: NUR negative urgency, PUR positive urgency, LPM lack of premeditation, LPS lack of perseverance, SS sensation seeking, SST stop-signal tasks
* Indicates repeat sample or subsample