Teen Girls Harm Themselves More Than Boys, CDC Finds

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About 1 in 4 teen girls and about 1 in 10 teen boys in the U.S. report deliberately harming themselves without intentions, a new report has found—one of the first to examine self-harm outside of a clinical setting, its authors say.

The report, published last month in the American Journal of Public , used survey data from more than 60,000 adolescents, ages 14 to 18, across 11 states; the data was collected by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in 2015 as part of its Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System. Teens were asked if they had deliberately hurt themselves, with no intention of suicide, at any point in the previous year. Overall, 17.6 percent of the sample indicated that they had—approximately 24 percent of girls and 11 percent of boys.

Rates of non-suicidal (NSSI) varied widely by state; in Idaho, for instance, more than 30 percent of teenage girls and 12.5 percent of boys reported recent NSSI; in Delaware, 17.7 percent of girls and 6.4 percent of teen boys did. Only 11 states opted to ask the self-harm question and had enough responses to be included in the study, somewhat limiting the dataset, says Nick McRee, associate professor of sociology at the University of Portland and one of the study’s authors. Still, girls reported higher rates of NSSI than boys in every included state.

“The numbers for females are particularly disturbing to me,” he says. “This is a really, really high prevalence of self-harm.”

Certain factors, such as being bullied or identifying as LGBT, were linked to a greater likelihood of self-harm. These risk factors were associated with self-harm for both genders, McRee said, but girls in the sample reported them more frequently.

Most self-harm studies in the U.S. have been conducted in clinical settings, McRee says, and involve a conversation between a pediatrician and a teen. Since those studies were necessarily limited in their size and scope, it was difficult to determine if their results could be extrapolated to the larger teen population. “What we’re adding is that this behavior is not restricted to the clinical population,” he says.

This study found a slightly more pronounced gap than past datasets have shown, says Janis Whitlock, director of the Cornell Research Program for Self-Injury Recovery. The self-harming teenage population is typically found to be about 65 percent female and 35 percent male, she adds.

“NSSI is usually undertaken, paradoxically, to make you feel better,” she says. “It tends to move someone from a state of high agitation or high disassociation to a state of calm.” It can also be used as a way to prompt attention or expressions of sympathy, particularly for adolescents who feel particularly alone in their emotional challenges. “The psychological desire to feel better (that is at the root of NSSI) is really healthy—but the behavior itself is unproductive in the long run.”

Whitlock, who was not involved in the study, cautioned that the broad of the self-harm question may have skewed the data slightly, particularly for male respondents. “Some of the things that young men do that we would consider self-injurious”—like punching an object with the conscious intent of hurting themselves—“wouldn’t come to mind” when asked one yes-or-no question about self-harm, she says.

McRee acknowledged that limitation, but added that since the study’s results sync up pretty closely to data from clinical settings—where questioners can be more explicit. “That gives me some that kids aren’t necessarily interpreting the question differently than they are in a clinical setting,” he says.

Self-harm of this kind is a relatively new subject of study, according to Whitlock. Though clinicians have been aware of it, particularly among adolescents, for decades, it was often examined only in its relationship to suicidal thoughts or behavior. Studies on NSSI have only begun to pick up speed in the last 15 years or so, she says, with the first representative study of U.S. college students conducted by Whitlock and colleagues in 2006.

High rates of self-injury, like those found in the current study, can appear alarming—particularly to —but it’s hard to know exactly how much they’ve changed over time because the data is limited, Whitlock says.

McRee and his colleagues undertook the study because they “were concerned that the behavior might be widespread”—a concern that seems to be justified. “Those numbers really suggest that youths engaged in that behavior are not an isolated subset of the population.” Acknowledging this is critical to adequately addressing the problem, he says, because for teens and parents struggling with self-harm, “it’s easy to conclude that they’re alone.”

In order to properly address the high rates of NSSI, McRee and Whitlock argue, the issue should be viewed as a public health problem. “It’s going to require a multi-faceted approach,” McRee says, one that will ideally include public awareness efforts, improved outreach to at-risk youths, and further study of the broader social factors that lead to teen self-harm.

thelaineranger on July 19th, 2018 at 05:35 UTC »

I'm sure there are dozens of reasons for self harming, but I wonder if the relief is always the same. I know, for instance, that OCD can lead to self harm, as can anxiety, depression, and personality disorders. All broadly involve unhappiness, to put it simply, but they all seem to have different neurological, biological, behavioural causes.

I have an addictive personality and suffer from chronic depression and BPD, and have abused drugs and alcohol, gotten clean, relapsed, and done it all over and over again. I also self harmed, a habit I did manage to kick for good (knock on wood). The ritual, sense of control, and relief of self harming was incomparable to liquor, pills, weed, whatever. I have hundreds of scars from cuts and burns over my arms and chest, which are really embarrassing now, but at the time, every moment of it delivered me this benzo-like calm. Watching them heal was a pet project, as was concealing the injury. I had certain knives I'd use certain ways that cut me the right way. That ritual - I think it's the best word for it - was so grounding. I could pour out all the shame and anger I felt in such an intense and personal way that it really seemed helpful at the time.

Anyway no real point to all that. If I could go back and undo all the damage I would. It's a stop gap that keeps you feeling ashamed and sick for longer. I just think it's interesting that all kinds of people seem to describe the relief they feel similarly. I also think that awareness for men like myself that self-harm affects us too is important. My sister did far less self harming than I did, and received much more care much more quickly, not to diminish her struggle at all. I think there was a level of confusion or embarrassment about dealing with it when it was a 21 year old man.

Pantastic_Studios on July 19th, 2018 at 04:25 UTC »

In high school I used to punch my metal locker just cause the pain it caused me helped distract me from all the other issues I dealt with. Self harm isn't always cutting.

tert_butoxide on July 19th, 2018 at 03:14 UTC »

This study covered over 64,000 adolescents in 11 states (almost evenly split between male and female). The study was designed by the CDC and administered nationwide, but not all states included the NSSI question.

In 2015, Arizona, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Idaho, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, and Vermont asked a single question on whether respondents had purposely hurt themselves without wanting to die during the past 12 months..... The item used by to evaluate NSSI asked, “during the past 12 months, how many times did you do something to purposely hurt yourself without wanting to die, such as cutting or burning yourself on purpose?” Response choices included “0 times” (82.5%), “1 time” (4.6%), “2 or 3 times” (5.2%), “4 or 5 times” (2.2%), and “6 or more times” (5.5%). [Reduced to a dichotomous variable for analysis.]

NSSI is considered a risk factor for suicidal behavior.

All else being equal, respondents who contemplated suicide were almost 3 times more likely to report NSSI than were youths who reported nosuchthinking, and developing a suicide plan increased the odds of NSSI by 78%.

The strength of this association was smaller in a second model, with fewer respondents but more variables (such as sexuality).

NSSI is much more common in adolescent girls; note that

In addition, female youths were more likely than male youths to report experiencing most of the health risks believed to be associated with NSSI, including depression, suicidal thoughts, forced sex, and electronic bullying.

For those interested, here is a free review (2016) on non-suicidal self injury. If you want more information about the OP study, but can't access it, reply here and I'll try to get you that info.