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Journal Article

Citation

Reinhardt M, Horváth Z, Drubina B, Kökönyei G, Rice KG. Crim. Justice Behav. 2021; 48(7): 902-922.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0093854821998411

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Significantly higher rates of nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) have been discovered among justice-involved juveniles. Our study aimed to discriminate homogeneous subgroups of justice-involved youth with different self-harm behavior characteristics based on latent class analysis. A total of 244 adolescents (92.6% boys; Mage = 16.99, SD = 1.28) in Hungarian juvenile detention centers completed measures of NSSI and dissociation. High-NSSI (Class 1; 9%), moderate-NSSI (Class 2; 42.6%), and low-NSSI (Class 3; 48.4%) profiles were detected relating to different forms of NSSI. Multiple comparisons showed that girls were members of Class 1 and 2 at higher rates and these subgroups showed significantly higher dissociation proportions than Class 3. Our findings pointed out diversity in self-harm profiles with different characteristics in terms of methods and severity of self-harm, experienced emotions, and other emotion regulation tendencies among justice-involved adolescents. These results suggest sophisticated treatment approaches to match variations in severity and presentation.

Keywords: Juvenile justice


Language: en

Keywords

dissociation; justice-involved juveniles; latent class analysis; nonsuicidal self-injury

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