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Self Injury

Self Injury - definition, why people self-injure? treatment.[ask a question] [printable format]

Self-injury, also known as "Deliberate Self-Harm Syndrome," is the act of attempting to alter a mood state by inflicting deliberate, repetitive, impulsive but non-lethal physical harm serious enough to cause tissue damage to one's body. Approximately 1 % (an estimated 2 to 3 million) of the United States population uses self-injury as a way of dealing with overwhelming feelings or situations. In general, persons seeking treatment are from a middle to upper-class background, of average to high intelligence, and have low self-esteem. Nearly fifty percent report physical and/or sexual abuse during his or her childhood. Many report (as high as 90%) that they were discouraged from expressing emotions, particularly anger and sadness. The surprisingly young age of onset is between 10-16 years, and most self-injurers are women.

Self-injurers commonly report that they feel empty inside, over or under stimulated, unable to express their feelings, lonely, not understood by others and fearful of intimate relationships and adult responsibilities. Self injury is their way to cope with or relieve painful or hard-to-express feelings and is generally not a suicide attempt. Self injury is usually kept secret, and the injurer often feels deep shame and guilt from this ritual.

Self Injury Includes:

Why people self-injure?

They find it soothing

A way of communicating what they can't say with words

An attempt to get people to react to their actions

Treatment

The diagnosis for someone who self-injures can only be determined by a licensed psychiatric professional. Self-harm behavior can be a symptom of several psychiatric illnesses: Personality Disorders, Bipolar Disorder, Major Depression, Anxiety Disorders, as well as psychoses such as Schizophrenia. Thus the effective treatment is most often a combination of medication, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and Interpersonal Therapy. Medication is often useful in the management of depression (Prozac, Zoloft, Celexa, etc.), anxiety (Diazepam and Lorazepam), obsessive-compulsive behaviors (Prozac, Luvox, Paxil Zoloft), and the racing thoughts that may accompany self-injury. Sometimes it is necessary to send an adolescent to a Residential Treatment Center for long-time care.

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