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Journal Article

Citation

Wadman R, Vostanis P, Sayal K, Majumder P, Harroe C, Clarke D, Armstrong M, Townsend E. Soc. Sci. Med. 2018; 212: 120-128.

Affiliation

School of Psychology, University Park, The University of Nottingham, Nottingham, NG7 2RD, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.socscimed.2018.07.021

PMID

30029090

Abstract

RATIONALE: Self-harm in young people is of significant clinical concern. Multiple psychological, social and clinical factors contribute to self-harm, but it remains a poorly understood phenomenon with limited effective treatment options.

OBJECTIVE: To explore young women's experience of self-harm in the context of interpersonal stressors and supports.

METHOD: Fourteen adolescent females (13-18 years) who had self-harmed in the last six months completed semi-structured interviews about self-harm and supports. Interpretative phenomenological analysis was undertaken.

RESULTS: Themes identified were: 1) Arguments and worries about family breakdown; 2) Unhelpful parental response when self-harm discovered and impact on seeking support; 3) Ongoing parental support; 4) Long-term peer victimization/bullying as a backdrop to self-harm; 5) Mutual support and reactive support from friends (and instances of a lack of support); 6) Emotions shaped by others (shame, regret and feeling 'stupid to self-harm'); and 7) 'Empty promises' - feeling personally let down by clinical services. These themes were organised under two broad meta-themes (psychosocial stressors, psychosocial supports). Two additional interconnected meta-themes were identified: Difficulties talking about self-harm and distress; and Impact on help-seeking.

CONCLUSION: Parents and peers play a key role in both precipitating self-harm and in supporting young people who self-harm. The identified themes, and the apparent inter-relationships between them, illustrate the complexity of self-harm experienced in the context of interpersonal difficulties, supports, and emotions. These results have implications for improving support from both informal and clinical sources.

Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Adolescence; Clinical services; Interviews; Qualitative methods; Self-harm; UK

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