1 / 33

Self-Injurious Behavior in Adolescents

Self-Injurious Behavior in Adolescents. WJCIA Annual Training Conference Stevens Point September 28, 2007. Kay F. Heimerl, MS LCSW Outagamie County DHHS heimerkf@co.outagamie.wi.us (920)832-5270. Self Injurious Behavior. How will you know I’m hurting If you cannot see my pain?

scout
Télécharger la présentation

Self-Injurious Behavior in Adolescents

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Self-Injurious Behavior in Adolescents WJCIA Annual Training Conference Stevens Point September 28, 2007

  2. Kay F. Heimerl, MS LCSW Outagamie County DHHS heimerkf@co.outagamie.wi.us (920)832-5270

  3. Self Injurious Behavior How will you know I’m hurting If you cannot see my pain? To wear it on my body Tells what words cannot explain. - C. Blount

  4. Definition: • An injury to one’s own body, done without suicidal intent or intent to attain sexual gratification. • Self-inflicted harm is enough to cause tissue damage. • Not part of spiritual ritual or for ornamental purposes. • Done as a way to alter a perceived intolerable mood state.

  5. Demographics • 3 million Americans • 1% of the general population • Males and Females • Middle class and educated • History of abuse and/or trauma • Often starts in early teens, peaks from ages 18-24, decreases in 30’s and 40’s

  6. Methods of SIB • Cutting • Burning • Scratching • Picking • Interfering with wound healing • Head banging • Hitting self

  7. Methods of SIB cont… • Breaking bones • Hair pulling • Spooning • Eating harmful objects – lightbulbs, glass, plastic • Ingesting chemicals • Over/under eating

  8. Comorbid behaviors • Reckless driving • Unprotected sex • Shoplifting • Promiscuity • Substance abuse • Eating disordered behavior

  9. Wound Severity • Extent of the damage • Level of medical intervention required • Location of the wound

  10. High Risk Groups • Emotionally disturbed children • History of trauma/abuse • Borderline Personality Disorder • Young males with psychosis • Gender identity disorders • Dissociative disorders

  11. High Risk Groups cont… • Substance abusers • Teens whose parents are physically or emotionally unavailable to them • Teens with untreated depression or anxiety

  12. . Why do people self injure?

  13. Because it works!!!All self-injury is designed to feel good at that moment.

  14. Purpose of SIB • Relief from psychological pain • Release of tension • Affect regulation – can’t feel, feel too much • Communicate feelings – anger, sadness, pain, etc.

  15. Purpose of SIB cont… • Way of being in control • Defense mechanism • Feel the need to be punished • To be unattractive • Endorphins of physical pain cover up the emotional pain • “Event marker”

  16. Attention seeking??? • Not usually • Sometimes done to induce rescuing behaviors in others • Can provide an opportunity for self-care afterwards

  17. Actually it is often under-diagnosed and under-reported due to: Shame, guilt, fear, pride Learned distrust of others Fear of legal consequences Mixed feelings about treatment/recovery Attention Seeking???

  18. SIB is often preceded by one or more of these emotional factors: • Depression • Stress • Hopelessness • Powerlessness • Purposelessness • Anxiety • Fear

  19. Psychological characteristics of Self Injurers • Invalidate self • Hypersensitive to rejection • Pervasive anger • Tend to suppress anger • Impulsive • High levels of aggressive feelings • Act on immediate mood

  20. Psychological characteristics cont . . . • Feel powerless over how or whether they cope with life • Not future-focused • Depressed/suicidal/self-destructive • Anxious • Lack of coping skills • Avoidant

  21. How should we react? • Don’t ignore it! • Always take it seriously. • Don’t judge! • Show concern. • Stay calm and sincere. • Don’t overreact, rescue or “hyper-nurture”.

  22. How should we react? • Remember that it is a cry for help. • Find out what is going on beneath the behavior. • Listen! Listen! Listen! • Don’t punish! Any interventions should be designed to protect, not to punish. • Acknowledge the SIB as a survival strategy.

  23. How should we react? • Assess the extent of the injury and intervene appropriately. • Let them know that it is OK to talk about their SIB. • State that you cannot talk to the person while they are injuring because you care about them and it hurts you to see that.

  24. How should we react? • Do not use ultimatums – i.e. stop or else! • Set reasonable limits.

  25. Interventions/Referrals: You must find something to replace the behavior. You can’t just take it away.

  26. Interventions/Referrals: • Psychotherapy – many methods and interventions • Trauma work – therapy, PTSD Workbook, EMDR • Contracts – agree to try alternate behaviors before SIB • Alternate behaviors need to be harm reducing – rubberband snapping, hands in ice, chewing cinnamon or hot peppers, etc.

  27. Interventions/Referrals: • Medication • Develop Personal Validation • Spirituality • Meditation • Yoga, Tai Chi • Appropriate physical releases

  28. Interventions/Referrals: • Group therapy – DBT, Abuse survivors • Family therapy • Change core beliefs and values • Teach emotional literacy – feeling lists, journaling • Safety bag

  29. Safety Planning • Assessment questions • Do you need to hurt yourself? What has brought you to this point? • Have you been at this point before? What did you do then to deal with it? How did you feel then? • What have you done to ease this discomfort in the past? What else can you do that won’t hurt you?

  30. Safety Planning • Assessment questions cont… • How do you feel right now? • How do you feel after hurting yourself? How will you feel tomorrow morning? • Can you avoid this stressor, or deal with it better in the future?

  31. Safety Planning • Contracts • List alternate behaviors to use before SIB • Names and numbers of contact persons • When to call Crisis • When to seek medical attention • Discuss placement options ahead of time if possible – i.e. hospital, crisis bed, secure detention, family member, etc.

  32. Safety Planning • Decide who will be included in the contract – parents, school personnel, mentor, physician, etc. • Determine length of contract viability • Be clear about mandatory reporting obligations and potential consequences • Consult with Mental Health professional

  33. QUESTIONS???

More Related