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Journal Article

Citation

Cawthorpe D, Somers D, Wilkes T, Phil M. Can. Child. Adolesc. Psychiatry Rev. 2003; 12(4): 103-106.

Affiliation

Department of Psychiatry, University of Calgary.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, Canadian Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

19030151

PMCID

PMC2533827

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to examine the occurrence of behavioral contagion among inpatient adolescent psychiatric patients in terms of past self-harm related behaviors. Our goal was to isolate persistent self-harm behavior from self-harm behavior that could be considered truly contagious. METHOD: We employed 5 years retrospective cohort study design in order to compare the occurrence of self-harm as inpatients among those with and without histories of self-harm behavior. RESULTS: Our results indicate that the spontaneous occurrence of self-harm among inpatients without a history of self-harm is very low. While there appears to be a group that exhibits self-harm as inpatients, the tendency in this group is more towards a reduction of the intensity or a cessation of self-harming behavior. CONCLUSIONS: Contagious self-harm does not appear to be a problem among inpatients with long stays on psychiatric treatment units. The overall tendency among inpatient adolescent psychiatric patients, especially those among those with histories of self-harm behavior is away from self-harming behavior.


Language: en

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