%0 Journal Article %T Nonsuicidal self-injury in a community sample of older children and adolescents of Mexico city %J Actas espanolas de psiquiatria %D 2014 %A Albores-Gallo, Lilia %A Méndez-Santos, José L. %A Xóchitl-García, Adriana Luna %A Delgadillo-González, Yariela %A Chávez-Flores, Carlos I. %A Martínez, Olga L. %V 42 %N 4 %P 159-168 %X Introduction. In Mexico, as in other countries, studies do not distinguish between attempted suicide and suicidal and nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI). The aim of this study was to investigate self-injury and its prevalence using several definitions, in addition to studying the frequency of the proposed DSM-5 criteria for NSSI in adolescent girls and boys.

METHODology. The study was observational, descriptive, cross-sectional, and comparative using a nonrandomized sample of adolescent girls and boys from official high schools who completed the self-injury questionnaire.

RESULTS. The participants were 533 older children and adolescents with a mean (SD) age of 13.37 (0.95) years, age range 11 to 17 years, and 54% female sex distribution. The prevalence of NSSI defined according to proposed DSM-5 criteria was 5.6% (N=30) and, according to a broad definition using only item 51 (“Do you hurt yourself without intending to end your life?”), 17.1% (N=140). Prevalence defined by the number of events in the last month (1-3 events) was 9.9% (N=53), in the last 6 months (1-3 events), 11.6% (N=62), and in the last year (5 events), 12.6% (N=67). The age at onset was 11.9 (1.39) years (range 6-15 years). Most DSM-5 criteria were more frequent in girls than boys.

CONCLUSIONS. Suicidal and nonsuicidal self-injury are frequent in the community. Important points for decisionmaking in schools and medical practice are discussed.

Language: en

%G en %I STM Editores %@ 1139-9287 %U http://dx.doi.org/