AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to create and test a new assessment tool, the Self-Injury Motivation Scale-Adolescent version (SIMS-A), for evaluating self-injury in teens who are hospitalized.
  • Results showed that motivations for self-injury in adolescents were similar to those in adults, but teens were more likely to use self-injury to communicate with others, with common methods including hitting, cutting, and burning.
  • The findings highlighted that self-injury was more prevalent and severe in female adolescents, with major depression being a key risk factor; however, the small sample size limits the study's generalizability, suggesting a need for further research.

Article Abstract

Objective: The aim of this study was to develop and pilot an instrument for the assessment of self-injury in adolescent inpatients.

Methods: The Self-Injury Motivation Scale was modified for use in adolescents. Thirty-eight consenting adolescent inpatients with a history of self-injury completed the Self-Injury Motivation Scale-Adolescent version (SIMS-A) and the Self-Injury Interview (SII) to collect information about a range of factors associated with self-injury, other clinical variables and demographic details.

Results: The SIMS-A was acceptable to this adolescent sample and motivations for self-injury were similar to those of adults using the original SIMS scale. Adolescents were, however, more likely to use self-injury for communicating to/influencing others compared to adults. The participants most frequently reported self-injury by hitting, cutting and burning. The clinical diagnosis most frequently associated with self-injury was major depression. Females reported earlier onset, higher frequency and multiple methods of self-injury compared to males. Distraction from emotional pain was the most common motivation for self-injury in both males and females.

Conclusions: This pilot study suggests the SIMS-A is a useful self-report measure to assist clinicians and adolescent patients to understand a behaviour that may be associated with shame, guilt or other difficult emotions for the adolescent. Results also support the contention that there are often multiple and conflicting motivations for self-injury. Self-injury in this population was more common and severe in female adolescents compared to males, while clinical depression was a risk factor for self-injury in both males and females. The small sample size of adolescent inpatients is an important limitation of this pilot study, and research using the SIMS-A in larger samples is warranted.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10398560701636955DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

self-injury
15
motivations self-injury
12
self-injury adolescent
8
self-report measure
8
self-injury motivation
8
adolescent inpatients
8
associated self-injury
8
compared males
8
self-injury males
8
pilot study
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!