TY - JOUR PY - 2005// TI - Self harm was misrepresented (again) JO - British medical journal: BMJ A1 - Kapur, Navneet A1 - Cooper, Jayne SP - 1026 EP - 1026 VL - 330 IS - 7498 N2 - In 2002 the British Medical Journal (BMJ) published a trial of a general practice based intervention to prevent repetition of deliberate self harm. The article was illustrated by two pictures, one on the front cover of the paper version of the journal, which depicted self cutting. Readers pointed out that this was misleading because self poisoning (rather than self injury) made up the great majority of self harm episodes. Times have moved on. The terminology has changed -- the qualifier 'deliberate' has been dropped from 'self harm' in response to the heterogeneous nature of the phenomenon and the concerns of service users -- but the choice of illustrative material seems to have remained the same. The synopsis of our article on risk assessment after self harm in the BMJ was accompanied by a picture of a person about to cut himself or herself with a blade. LA - SN - 0959-8138 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.330.7498.1026 ID - ref1 ER -