| Literature DB >> 29475823 |
Rebecca Grist1, Joanna Porter2, Paul Stallard1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Self-harm is common among adolescents and is associated with a number of negative psychosocial outcomes including a higher risk of suicide. Recent reviews highlight the lack of research into specific interventions for children and young people who self-harm. Developing innovative interventions that are coproduced with individuals with lived experience and that reduce self-harm are key challenges for self-harm prevention.Entities:
Keywords: adolescents; behavior therapy; cognitive therapy; mobile apps; qualitative research; self-injurious behavior; telemedicine
Year: 2018 PMID: 29475823 PMCID: PMC5845106 DOI: 10.2196/mental.8779
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JMIR Ment Health ISSN: 2368-7959
Themes, theme definition, and subthemes derived from thematic analysis.
| Theme | Definition | Subthemes |
| Appraisal of BlueIce | Indicators of BlueIce acceptability |
Helpful Simple Provides a range of activities and sections Would recommend to others Benefit to people with other mental health problems More personalization Add games |
| Usability of BlueIce | Ease and patterns of BlueIce usage |
Easy to use Accessible Convenient on own device Barrier if not on own device Situational barriers to use Finding wording confusing Frequency of app usage declining over the course of the study Attrition due to therapeutic gain High-frequency user |
| Safety and impact of BlueIce on self-harm | Indicators of BlueIce safety and purpose fulfillment |
Concerns about mood diary Reassuring BlueIce not making self-harm worse BlueIce used when felt like self-harm BlueIce stopped self-harm BlueIce stopped more self-harm after initial episode Reduction in self-harm |
| Benefits of BlueIce | Reported cognitive, behavioral, and affective benefits of using BlueIce |
Mood tracking and noticing patterns Reminder things get better Reminder you are able to cope Identifying benefits on mood Identifying triggers of negative moods BlueIce as a catalyst for difficult conversations New and personalized strategies Reminder that they have strategies Slow or reframe thinking Distraction Positive affective change |
| Agency and control | Perceived lack of ability to control self-harm urges and control emotion regulation |
Differing willingness to receive help Urges to self-harm too overwhelming Feeling too overwhelmed to use BlueIce Urge to self-harm out of my control Hopelessness about helpfulness of interventions |
| BlueIce less helpful | Experiences of participants for whom BlueIce did not reduce self-harm |
Not ready to stop self-harming Motivation to use BlueIce Personal crisis needing more CAMHSa contact Ambivalence about helpfulness of BlueIce |
aCAMHS: child and adolescent mental health services.