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Journal Article

Citation

Matthews EL, Townsend ML, Gray AS, Grenyer BFS. Sch. Psychol. Int. 2021; 42(2): 187-209.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0143034320975846

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

School communities face challenges in responding effectively to the rising incidence of student self-harm. Evidence-informed guidelines may provide a platform for schools to provide better responses and improve the outcomes of students who engage in self-harm.This paper critically reviews policies published in English targeted for schools or education settings on effective early identification and intervention for children and adolescent self-harm. A grey literature search was conducted using Start Page web search engine with a documentary analysis approach applied to review polices that met criteria.The review identified 16 policies that aim to help school and education staff to identify and respond to student self-harm. The key themes include identification and risk assessment, intervention, roles and responsibilities, as well as addressing issues surrounding evidence-based psychological education and intervention.An evidence-informed policy that addresses multiple aspects of responding to and reducing student self-harm may be a vital foundation of a school?s response to this growing public health issue. This paper outlines key points that will help inform the development of evidence-informed guidelines for schools to respond to student self-harm and presents an exemplar policy framework for use by schools.


Language: en

Keywords

deliberate self-harm; education; grey literature; non-suicidal self-injury; policy; school

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