
@article{ref1,
title="How Much Detail Needs to be Elucidated in Self-Harm Research?",
journal="Journal of youth and adolescence",
year="2010",
author="Stanford, Sarah and Jones, Michael P.",
volume="39",
number="5",
pages="504-513",
abstract="<p>Assessing self-harm through brief multiple choice items is simple and less invasive than more detailed methods of assessment. However, there is currently little validation for brief methods of self-harm assessment. This study evaluates the extent to which adolescents' perceptions of self-harm agree with definitions in the literature, and what level of question detail produces optimal concordance rates. Two hundred and thirty-three (69% female) first year university students aged 17-21 completed a self-harm coding task; we created three levels of question detail and randomly allocated participants to three study groups: brief, low detail, and high detail. The present findings suggest that that adolescents' perceptions of self-harm are generally concordant with a consensus definition of self-harm. Low level of detail in the question produced greatest accuracy in responses; adolescents who demonstrated adequate task understanding were able to correctly identify 94% of examples of self-harm behaviour and 86% of examples of behaviour that were not self-harm. We identified lower concordance rates for eating disordered behaviour and recreational petrol sniffing. This indicates that adolescents perceive these behaviours to be self-harm, in contrast to the reference definition we utilised. Overall, this study provides support for using a brief assessment of self-harm where minimal detail regarding self-harm behaviour is required.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0047-2891",
doi="10.1007/s10964-009-9492-y",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10964-009-9492-y"
}