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Cutting it Fine: SelfInjury in C ntext

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Michael Jackson (quoted in Zohar) chapter Benign Schizotypy? ... Legs. 92.2. Arms. Psychology of self-injury. Feldman, 1988; Van Der Kolk, 1989; Favazza, 1989; ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Cutting it Fine: SelfInjury in C ntext


1
Cutting it FineSelf-Injury in C ntext
  • Professor Graham Martin
  • OAM, MD, FRANZCP, DPM
  • g.martin_at_uq.edu.au

2
John
  • Oh! Do it again Doc!

3
Body Art
  • The Australian Museum
  • Exhibition 2000
  • http//www.austmus.gov.au/bodyart/about/index.htm

4
Tribal Connectedness and Representation
5
Ancient Tattoos
  • Tattooed markings on skin and incised markings in
    clay provide some of the earliest evidence that
    humans have long practised a wide range of body
    art.

6
Ötzi the Ice man
  • This frozen human was found in the Austrian Alps
    and dates to 5,300 years ago. His is the oldest
    tattooed body known.

7
Tattooing in Japan (Jômon period)
  • Earliest evidence of tattooing in Japan (3000
    years ago) comes from figurines called dogu,
    which display similar markings to the tattooed
    mouths of the Indigenous of Japan (Ainu).

8
Samoan Tattooing
  • The word tatau (tattoo) in Samoan means
    appropriate, balanced and fitting.
  • The order in which the tattoo is applied is
    always the same. The lumbar region (where the
    Samoan mythical figures Taema and Tilafaiga were
    joined) is always tattooed first and the navel
    last. The navel design is very important and is
    called the pute. Without this, the tattoo is
    unfinished and the wearer carries a sense of
    shame because he was not able to complete the
    ceremony.

9
Maori Culture
  • Ta Moko is like a history of a person's
    achievements and represents their status in their
    tribe. The left side of the face relates to the
    father's history and the right side to the
    mother's history.
  • Originally, Ta Moko was chiselled into the skin
    using an albatross bone.

10
Papuan Scarification
  • In Papua New Guinea, scarification is related to
    initiation. The Wagan ceremony celebrates the
    return of the ancestral crocodile. The skin on
    the chest, back and buttocks of the initiate is
    cut with a bamboo sliver to test a young mans
    physical strength and self-discipline.

11
Papuan Scarification
  • The marks have many meanings for me. I wear
    the marks of
    the ancestral crocodile. This is a power mark, a
    spirit, a security used for protection and
    connection with the totems and ancestors of my
    clan, the 'Crocodile Men of East Sepik', Yenchen
    Village, Papua New Guinea
  • Ben
    Lewis,
  • Healer
    and Performer, 22

12
Aboriginal Scarification
  • In Australia, scarring was practised widely, but
    is now restricted almost entirely to parts of
  • Arnhem Land.
  • We call them bolitj(adornment scar) Bob
    Burruwal,
  • Rembarrnga, Arnhem Land

13
Aboriginal Scarification
  • Each deliberately placed scar tells a story of
    pain, endurance, identity, status, beauty,
    courage, sorrow or grief.
  • You must have the cuts before you can trade
    anything, before you can get married, before you
    can sing ceremonial songs.

14
Tattoo Togetherness
  • Janet's tattoos on her arm include a Ganesha -
    a Hindu deity who has the power to remove
    obstacles.
  • Tattoo artist Mike states that the imagery on his
    body is "his soul on the outside."

15
Contemporarybranding cutting
  • My body adornments are about my inner spirit,
    love, trust, truth, strength and beauty, which in
    turn makes up my outward spirit, enabling me to
    be the strong, brave, loving woman I am
  • Pauline

16
Body Scars
  • Tribal Belonging
  • Rite of Passage
  • Myth
  • Art
  • Memories of Failure and Success

17
The size of the problem
  • Estimated 2 million people in the US use
    self-injury to deal with intolerable inner
    feelings of pain, stress, anxiety, depression
    despair
  • Keith Hawton et al (JAACAP, 2002) suggest that
    3.6 school based adolescents (ages 15/16) have
    self cut.
  • Irish National Suicide Research Foundation (2004)
    found a lifetime prevalence of 5.7 overall with
    9.1 female and 2.4 male.
  • 6.2 of secondary school students over previous
    year (De Leo Heller, 2004)

18
AUSTRALIA - EDED Study(1st year High School -
aged 13)
  • Deliberate Self-Injury - 273 (14.3)

F M All
19
EDED study - logistic regression
  • Classic correlates of depression and sexual abuse
    - not significant
  • Surprise finding of physical abuse and anxiety as
    major predictors
  • Only suicide attempt predicted the multiple
    episodes

Martin G., Bergen,H., Roeger, L. Allison, S.,
2006. Correlates of non-suicidal self-harming
behaviour in young community adolescents.
Submitted
20
Extended Adolescence
  • Weve lost our ability to help young people enjoy
    life in reasonable ways
  • Weve lost our connectedness as a society
  • Weve lost our rituals to provide a Rite of
    Passage to Adulthood
  • Life and Death play of young people may replace
    lost ritual (Rob Barrett, Adelaide)

21
Belly Ring
  • Has gained acceptance in our society

22
Eyebrow Body Art
  • Also accepted

23
Tongue Studs
  • Perhaps less accepted or acceptable

24
Ear Piercing
  • One or two?

25
Ear piercing
  • Or more?

26
Facial Piercing
  • Over the top?

27
Lips and Noses
  • A little harder to take perhaps

28
Nipples and Genitals
  • For most of us, probably way over the top

29
Artificial Scar
  • Now we are getting problematic

30
Piercing Ritual
  • Hanging about
  • A Club I definitely do not want to join

31
The Body Sacred
32
Whirling Dervish
33
Voodoo Ritual
  • Animals are sacrificed
  • People may or may not get injured
  • Through the Ritual
  • Through Ecstacy
  • Through Belief

34
Hindu Sadhu or Fakirs
  • Walking on Hot Coals has become common as a
    management development test.
  • Penetration of the Skin has (as far as I know) not

35
Self Injury as a Continuum
  • From the Body as Sacred (the need to put out
    devils)
  • Through the body as expression of uniqueness or a
    symbol of joining
  • To the Body as Instrument of Pain and Bleeding to
    relieve our inner suffering

36
Spiritual Intelligence (Zohar)
  • Ecstasy and the God Spot
  • Hypothalamus contains a small group of cells
    which resonate at 40 Hz during visions, psychotic
    experience, ecstasy, religious experience and
    with certain drugs
  • Michael Jackson (quoted in Zohar) chapter Benign
    Schizotypy? The case of spiritual experience in
    Claridge, G Schizotypy Oxford University Press,
    Oxford, 1997

37
SEROTONIN IN CUTTING
  • Low levels of 5-HIAA in CSF of depressed suicide
    attempters (Asberg et al., 1976)
  • Reduced levels of 5-HIAA in male borderlines
    (Brown et al., 1982)
  • Low serotonin correlated with suicide attempts,
    assaultiveness, instability, aggression
    impulsiveness (Coccaro et al., 1989 Markowitz et
    al., 1995)
  • Self-mutilators have more personality pathology,
    greater lifetime aggression, more antisocial
    behaviour, and lower levels of serotonin activity
    (Simeon et al., 1992)

38
The Inner Pain
  • Jenni (14) electively mute after she was raped.
  • She repeatedly harmed herself in small ways but
    for 4 months could not verbalise either her
    feelings or what had occurred.

39
Kelly
40
More Serious Typesof Self Injury
  • Stomach Cutting

41
More Serious Typesof Self Injury
  • Techno
  • and Star

42
More Serious Typesof Self Injury
  • Chest cutting

43
More Serious Typesof Self Injury
  • Biohazard
  • and
  • Skull

44
Religious Fervour ?
  • Jesus
  • And
  • Mandala

45
Parts of Body Injured (Murray et al 2005)
46
Psychology of self-injury
  • Feldman, 1988
  • Van Der Kolk, 1989
  • Favazza, 1989
  • Linehan, 1993
  • Allen, 1995
  • Suyemoto, 1998
  • Levenkron, 1998
  • Osuch, Noll Putnam, 1999
  • Hawton Van Heeringen, 2000
  • Gratz, 2000
  • Humband Tantaim, 2004

47
STEPS TO EFFECTIVE PRACTICE WITH SELF-INJURY IN
YOUNG PEOPLE
48
Self Injury Motivation ScaleOsuch EA, Noll JG,
Putnam, F.W. (2000). The motivations for
self-injury in psychiatric inpatients.
Psychiatry 62334-346.
Current SIMS study on inpatient adolescents
(Martin et al.)
  • To show others how hurt I feel
  • To distract myself from emotional pain
  • To punish myself for being bad
  • To decrease an empty feeling
  • To produce a feeling of numbness
  • To keep bad memories away
  • To reduce a feeling of being utterly alone
  • To experience a high like a drug high

49
Moving on from Self-Harm (MOSH - Martin et al.,
2006)
50
Moving on from Self-Harm (MOSH - Martin et al.,
2006)
51
Mental Health in Schools (WHO)
52
If Then
  • If you are anxious about helping with the crisis,
    managing the process, or doing the therapy, then
    trust your own feelings
  • Seek alternative care for the young person
  • OR
  • Alternatively seek regular supervision to enable
    you to cope with confidence

53
If Then
  • If the self injury needs medical attention then
    seek appropriate help.
  • Ensure the young person is not treated badly,
    roughly or with disdain by medical or other
    staff. Explain, if you have to, that at this time
    this is the only way they can seek help

54
If Then
  • If a professional complains that the young person
    is attention seeking, then gently and
    respectfully explain that is exactly what they
    need - attention.
  • It is just that, at this time, we have not been
    able to help them share their inner pain

55
CRISIS INTERVENTION
  • Listening and Responding
  • Define the Problem
  • Ensure Safety (Client, Family your own)
  • Provide Support
  • Acting and Involvement
  • Examine Alternatives
  • Make Plans
  • Gain Commitment

56
CRISIS INTERVENTION
  • Never be sworn to secrecy
  • Up front, make it clear that what is said may be
    confidential, but you have the right to make your
    opinion public - particularly if you think the
    young persons life (or someone elses) is in
    danger

57
CRISIS INTERVENTION
  • Do not focus, at this time, on the self injury
    more than you have to in ensuring safety
  • Focus on developing a supportive relationship, a
    clear plan for ongoing care, and/or a therapeutic
    alliance
  • A relationship
  • A set of clear tasks
  • Toward a clear goal (short and/or long-term)

58
Tension Reduction
  • Cutting is not about Suicide
  • Cutting is an effective method of tension
    reduction in troubled young people
  • Replace self-injury with other less destructive
    behaviours that achieve the same outcome

59
Distraction TechniquesAmerican Academy of Child
Adolescent Psychiatry
  • Counting to 10
  • Waiting for 15 mins
  • Thought stopping
  • Breathing Exercises
  • Journaling
  • Drawing
  • Thinking about Positive Images
  • Using Ice
  • Using Rubber Bands

60
If Then
  • If you feel the young person is (for instance)
    depressed then try to get some simple measure of
    this
  • Trust the young persons responses
  • Use a Visual Analogue Scale (0-10)

61
If Then
  • If the scale score is 7 or over out of 10 then
    try to find out whether life is worth living
  • If the answer is no, then check for any reasons
    the young person may have for living (future,
    family, friends)
  • Be gently persistent

62
If Then
  • If the outlook is bleak (and it may well be),
    then check for suicidal thoughts (score 1)
  • If the thoughts are persistent, intrusive and
    frequent (eg daily), then check for specific
    plans (how to get means, what pills and how to
    get them) (score 3)

63
If Then
  • If there are plans, then check if the self injury
    was part of the plan (Do not assume)
  • Check whether the young person wishes to die,
    realising that this is a long term solution to
    what may be short term problems

64
If Then
  • You already know of the self harm (score 4)
  • If the young person has threatened someone they
    will die then score an additional 2
  • If the score from thoughts, threats, plans,
    attempts or the self harm is only 4 (the self
    harm), you should be able to manage

65
If Then
  • If the young person actively seeks to die, then
    ask about previous attempts (score 5)
  • Check for Intent (Did they seek to die at that
    time?) (score an additional 1)
  • Check for Lethality (score an additional 1)

66
If Then
  • If the total score is 5 - 7, then you may need to
    seek help with the management
  • If the score is 8 or above then the young person
    may be not only self-harming, but also at serious
    risk of suicide. You may have to hospitalise.
  • Never take the decision alone

67
If Then
  • If at all possible, involve the family or some
    other person or agency in the community
  • Never carry the load alone - its not clever!

68
Therapy
  • Brief Focused Therapies
  • CBT
  • Narrative
  • Solution Focused Family Therapy
  • Group based semi-manualised IPT
  • Manage with admissions under the young persons
    control

69
What young people thought would be helpful (UK
Self harm report 2005)
70
Current Programs
  • SIMS Study Adolescent Ward, RBH
  • National Epidemiological Study (ARC)
  • RCT Group Therapy in 12-17 year olds
  • SI Internet Site evaluation study
  • Neurobiology of SI (using fMRI)
  • Development of Training Materials (Rotary)
  • Another 15 ideas in development

71
Resources
  • Selekman, MD (2002). Living on the razors edge
    Solution-oriented brief family therapy with
    self-harming adolescents. New York, Norton.
  • www.focusas.com/SelfInjury.html
  • www.siari.co.uk/
  • www.angelfire.com/md2/simianline/selfinjury.html
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