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No Secrets. Self-injury awareness: No Secrets – history and progress Self-injury (inc. NICE guidance) My personal story (Kerri Jones). Supporting those affected by self-injury. WARM UP Exercise 1. Why No Secrets started. Co-founded Oct 2007 – 2 volunteers Lack of support
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No Secrets • Self-injury awareness: • No Secrets – history and progress • Self-injury (inc. NICE guidance) • My personal story (Kerri Jones) Supporting those affected by self-injury
Why No Secrets started... • Co-founded Oct 2007 – 2 volunteers • Lack of support • ‘Alone’ – me and family • Lack of understanding • Nobody spoke about it • “No Secrets” – how we want it
Our Mission • To provide a safe and supportive environment for anybody affected by self-injury • To raise awareness of self-injury • To tackle stigma associated with self-injury We aim to achieve the above by providing peer support, providing awareness-level training, running awareness campaigns, communicating with as many as possible and working closely with local health services.
Since October 2007... • Group 1 St Helens continuing to run • Group 2 Wigan started early 2011 • Group 3 Halton launched May 2011 • Group 4 Family/friend support – 20th July @ PB • Continual awareness level training to over 200 people • Local press, Saints (RLFC), ‘Pick Me Up’, BBC News • Now have 10 volunteers • Successful activities/fundraisers
No Secrets in one sentence... • “A feeling of belonging and that I’m not alone” • “Means I can make a difference to other people’s lives” • “Support and guidance, and friends when you need it most” • “People understand self-harm, and me” • “No Secrets is a fantastic place to open up and meet new friends” • “A safe place just to ‘be’” • “I belong!” • “People committed to improving lives”
No Secrets in one word... • “Happy” • “Inspirational” • “Accepted” • “Friendship” • “Peace” • “Friendly” • “Helpful” • “Reliable” • “Super” • “Hope” From Wigan & St Helens group members in, April 2011
Self-injury Definition adopted by NICE: “intentional self-poisoning or injury, irrespective of the apparent purpose of the act”. Not always connected to suicide. Majority preventing suicide. 2 categories: Self-injury and self-poisoning.
Self-injury/self-poisoning • SI - Cutting, swallowing objects, insertion of foreign objects into body, burning, stabbing. • SP – overdosing with medicines, swallowing poisonous substance. • Self-injury more common than self-poisoning, this is not reflected in statistics. • People who self-poison are more likely to seek professional help.
NICE: Clinical need for guidance • 150,000 presentations to A&E each year • UK rates are amongst highest in Europe • Half of the 4000 people who die each year by suicide will have self harmed at some point • Self-poisoning most commonly seen in ED’s • Cutting most common form of SI • 100x more likely than general population to die by suicide, whether intentional or accidental Information from Clinical guideline 16
NICE: Key priorities for implementation • Respect, understanding and choice • Staff training • Activated charcoal • Triage • Treatment • Assessment of needs and risk • Psychological, psychosocial and pharmacological interventions Information from Clinical guideline 16
Risk factors & life events • Single • Divorced • Live alone • Single parent • Severe lack social support • Disadvantaged background • Victimisation (domestic abuse, sexual abuse etc) • Alcohol/drug use Information from Clinical guideline 16
Psychological characteristics • Certain characteristics more common in SH: • Impulsivity • Hopelessness • Poor problem solving • Nearly ½ those presenting to ED’s with SI meet criteria for having a PD (though this can bring it’s own problems)
How many self-inflicted injuries did Warrington A&E treat within the space of 9 months (1st April- 31st Dec) in 2010 802
What percentage of that 802 were male? 42% were males That’s 338 of 802
What was the average age of all 802 people who presented to Warrington A&E? 34.5 Years
WHY DO WE SELF HARM? • Relieves tension • Punishment • Calming/self soothing • Focus shifts from emotional to physical • Control • Adrenaline rush • Numbness/detached - “It makes me feel alive” • Anger and self-hatred • Depression “jeckle and hyde effect” • Very upset • Problems can seem smaller afterwards • Anxiety
IF ONLY YOU COULD GET IT! • Self harm makes me feel something when I feel numb • I don’t do it for attention • I’m hurting myself, nobody else • It’s mostly easier not to tell anyone I’ve done it • A bigger wound doesn’t mean worse feelings • We can have accidents too
It helped when… • The professionals working with me weren’t scared of talking about self harm. • My support worker expressed they wanted to understand as much as possible • Somebody accepted that self-injury is my way of coping for the time being • I was told to be ‘safe’ rather than told not to do it • People truly believed I didn’t want to keep hurting myself, even though it didn’t come across that way • I was offered support after telling somebody about my self harm, rather than being told I was seeking attention and being manipulative.
It really didn’t help me when: • People said I was being stupid or I should have known better • Staff got annoyed with me after I’d harmed, for not talking about it before I did it • A&E staff refused me pain relief • Someone took all my sharps away (where no suicidal intent present) • I heard people laughing at me • Staff said they were disappointed in me • I was reminded of those who I love and told how much I was letting them down • People made a big deal of it when they didn’t need to
In summary Generally, focusing solely on negatives to self-injury will make person feel worse. Try to explore a variety of potential positives and negatives (Sharon)
My story • Abused in early childhood • Uni, deaths (april – Aug), cutting and suicide attempts 2005-2006 - SIPU • 2007 Started voluntary work and co-founded No Secrets with mum • Extent of abuse accidentally revealed to family • Reported abuse to police • Self-injury – as long as remember. My release from overwhelming feelings of sadness, self-hatred and anger.
What I’ve learned since initial breakdown • Honesty is vital • Acceptance important • Actively work on tackling problems • Help others with similar issues • I’m not alone • I’ve achieved more than I thought capable • Anchors – family, friends, pets
Open Q&A • This is your chance to ask any questions around self-injury and/or mental health problems • We will always be honest and do not worry that any questions will act as a trigger • We want you to be honest • Bring up anything you may want to discuss within the group • Your questions help us to see how it is from your perspectives
Feedback and check out • Share with the group what you have learned from this session • It’s important that we remember that anybody can be affected by self-injury. If you have been affected by this session try to speak to somebody before you leave • Check-out... What are you going to do this evening?
Evaluation • We would be grateful if you could complete the evaluation form for us to feedback your own thoughts on how this session went • This will help us to improve and continue the work we are doing
Thanks! More details can be found on our website: http://nosecrets.moonfruit.com For more information on the WIGAN group, contact Kerri on 07846 889 300 or email kerri86@gmail.com For more information on the ST HELENS or HALTON groups contact Tina on 07863 736 647 or email tina.sthelens@gmail.com Thank you for your support!