Self-injury more about coping than a cry for help

Authored by manchester.ac.uk and submitted by mvea

New research has revealed that most people who harm themselves do it as a way to deal with their emotional pain, rather than a cry for help.

While people do harm themselves as a way to communicate with, or to influence the behaviour of, others, only about 23% to 33% of people who self-injure say they do this.

Clinical Psychologist Dr Peter Taylor, from The University of Manchester found that between 63% and 78% of non-suicidal people who self-injure do it as a short-term strategy to ease their emotional distress.

However, though self-injuring may work for short periods, the effect can be short lived, and make matters worse in the long term.

Non suicidal self-injury affects around 13%–17% of adolescents and young adults. Studies say it is associated with a range of psychological difficulties including depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder. Though many use it as a way to cope, it is also a risk factor for later suicide.

The study was carried out by researchers from The University of Manchester, University of Liverpool, Leeds Beckett University, and Edith Cowan University in Australia.

Church_of_Realism on December 31st, 2017 at 15:38 UTC »

When I was working on my MA in Clinical Counseling one of my professors referred to cutting behavior as honorable because it was the brain's way of setting up a release valve that didn't involve suicide or other more harmful coping mechanisms such as drugs and alcohol. Her goal was to get her client's brains or psyche's to trust her enough to work through whatever trauma was concealed by cutting which would be accessed through trauma focused behavioral therapy. It basically is a process for people to own their trauma and tell their story in their own way and in doing so, it disarms the cutting mechanism as a coping strategy.

m1sta on December 31st, 2017 at 15:30 UTC »

I feel pain for a reason I can’t understand, control, or see an end to

Is temporarily replaced by

I feel pain for a reason I can understand, can potentially control, and can heal from.

pentuppenguin on December 31st, 2017 at 14:41 UTC »

Over in /r/mentalhealth I just saw an app to try to get past the period of time when you want to self harm. https://www.reddit.com/r/mentalhealth/comments/7n787p/anti_self_harm_app/?ref=share&ref_source=link