| Literature DB >> 31655964 |
Lucy Licence1, Chris Oliver1, Jo Moss1,2, Caroline Richards3.
Abstract
Self-harm is purportedly common in autistic individuals, but under-researched, particularly in younger samples and those without intellectual disability. This study aimed to describe prevalence, profile and correlates of self-harm in autistic individuals without impairments in adaptive functioning. Parents of autistic participants (n = 83) completed questionnaires regarding the presence/topography of self-harm, demographic characteristics, autism severity, age of diagnosis, affect, activity levels and repetitive behaviour. 24.10% of participants engaged in self-harm. Self-harm was associated with significantly higher levels of impulsivity, over-activity, negative affect, compulsive behaviour and insistence on sameness. Low mood and overactivity/impulsivity predicted the presence of self-harm, with the model correctly classifying 82.9% of cases. Findings highlight a role for impaired behavioural inhibition and low mood in the aetiological mechanisms underpinning self-harm in autism.Entities:
Keywords: Affect; Autism; Impulsivity; Prevalence; Risk-marker; Self-harm
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31655964 PMCID: PMC7502049 DOI: 10.1007/s10803-019-04260-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Autism Dev Disord ISSN: 0162-3257
The types of self-harm, total number of topographies displayed by each participant, and frequency of self-harm displayed in the preceding month by autistic participants
| Percentage (N) | |
|---|---|
| Topography | |
| Hits self with body | 60.0 (12) |
| Hits self against object | 25.0 (5) |
| Hits self with object | 5.0 (1) |
| Bites self | 50.0 (10) |
| Pulls self | 35.0 (7) |
| Rubs/scratches self | 50.0 (10) |
| Inserts | 5.0 (1) |
| Othera | 12.5 (2) |
| Number of topographies | |
| 1 | 35.0 (7) |
| 2 | 25.0 (5) |
| 3 | 20.0 (4) |
| 4 | 5.0 (1) |
| 5 | 15.0 (3) |
| Frequencyb | |
| Hourly | 5.6 (1) |
| Daily | 22.2 (4) |
| Weekly | 55.6 (10) |
| Monthly | 16.7 (4) |
a‘Other’ total N = 16 participants due to missing data
bN = 19 for this analysis due to missing data
Demographic characteristics, autism severity and age of diagnosis compared between autistic participants who do and do not engage in self-harm
| Self-harm | No self-harm | U/χ2 | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | 20 | 63 | ||
| Age (years) | ||||
| Mean | 13.60 | 14.30 | 627.50 | .98 |
| ( | (4.36) | (6.70) | ||
| Range | 7–23 | 4–45 | ||
| Age (Categories) | ||||
| % ≤ 11 | 25 | 39.68 | 3.95 | .14 |
| % 12–18 | 60 | 34.92 | ||
| % > 18 | 15 | 25.40 | ||
| Gender | ||||
| % male | 75 | 82.5 | N/Aa | .52 |
| Mobility | ||||
| % mobile | 100 | 96.83 | N/Aa | 1.00 |
| Speech | ||||
| % verbal | 95b | 100 | N/Aa | .24 |
| SCQ total scores | ||||
| Mean | 25.86 | 24.33 | 507.00 | .19 |
| (SD) | (4.80) | (4.88) | ||
| Range | 15–33.4 | 15–34 | ||
| Score 22 above on SCQ | ||||
| % above 22 | 90 | 65.08 | 4.59 | .03 |
| Age of diagnosis (months) | ||||
| Mean | 102.11b | 86.02 | 480.00 | .19 |
| (SD) | (63.49) | (71.66) | ||
| Range | 24–240 | 24–444 | ||
Chi Square and Mann–Whitney U tests were employed to detect significant differences (p < .01). All analyses were two-tailed
aFishers exact t calculated as 1 or more cells had expected count < 5
bN = 19 as missing data for Self-harm group
Comparison of measures of affect, repetitive behaviour and activity/impulsivity between participants who did and did not engage in self-harm
| Measure Subscale | Median scores for participants | U Score | Effect size | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Self-harm | No self-harm | ||||
| MIPQ-S | |||||
| Mood | |||||
| Interest and pleasure | 11.500 | 14.00 | 428.500 | .032 | |
| MIPQ total score | |||||
| RBQ | |||||
| Stereotyped behaviour | 5.00 | 3.00 | 453.500 | .106 | |
| Compulsive behaviour | |||||
| Insistence on sameness | |||||
| Restricted preferences | 7.00 | 4.00 | 395.500 | .050 | |
| Repetitive language | 6.00 | 4.00 | 411.500 | .074 | |
| RBQ total score | |||||
| TAQ | |||||
| Overactivity | |||||
| Impulsivity | |||||
| Impulsive speech | |||||
| TAQ total score | |||||
Median scores and Mann–Whitney U statistics are reported. Significant differences (p < .01) are highlighted in bold. Where data violated parametric assumptions effect size r was used as an alternative to standard difference statistics and then interpreted with Cohen’s d (Rosenthal et al. 1994; Fritz et al. 2012). For determining the strength of effect size r as interpreted by Cohen’s d, arbitrary cut-offs were assigned as followed: .1 = small, .3 = medium, .5 = large
Binomial logistic regression predicting the likelihood of an autistic individual engaging in self-harm
| SE | Wald | Odds ratio | 95.0% CI for odds ratio | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lower | Upper | |||||||
| Mood | ||||||||
| Repetitive behaviour | .04 | .03 | 1.53 | 1 | .216 | 1.04 | .98 | 1.11 |
| Overactivity/impulsivity | ||||||||
Significant predictors (p < .05) are highlighted in bold