Title: Helping Teens and Families Manage SelfInjurious Behavior
1Helping Teens and Families Manage
Self-Injurious Behavior
- March, 2007
- Kim Poling, LCSW
- Services for Teens at Risk
2Objectives
- Distinguish suicidal behavior from non-suicidal
self-injury - Review strategies for assessing suicide risk and
negotiating the Safety Plan - Review facts about SIB
- Overview of strategies for intervening with SIB.
3Objectives (continued)
- Review importance of establishing the treatment
contract. - Learn chain analysis as a strategy to both assess
and treat self-destructive behavior. - Learn to teach emotion regulation skills to both
teens and family to help reduce self-injurious
behavior.
4Emotion Regulation Skills to be covered
- Affect education
- Decreasing vulnerability to emotional
dysregulation - Use of the freeze frame (chain analysis)
- Mindfulness of your current emotion
- Opposite action
- Distress tolerance
5Assessing Suicidality General Guidelines
- An ongoing process for adolescents at risk.
- Do not be afraid of asking about suicidal
thoughts and plans. - Begin with general questions, move to more
specific. - Be gently persistent in seeking details.
6Assessment of Suicidal Ideation
- Have you ever thought you would be better off
dead? - Do you have thoughts of wanting to hurt yourself?
(intensity and frequency) - Do you have a plan?
- Do you intend to carry it out?
- What things keep you from acting on your thoughts
(Reasons for Living)? - What things would increase the likelihood of
trying to hurt yourself?
7More questions about suicidal thoughts
- How likely to act
- How likely able to resist
- Circumstances (when intoxicated, psychotic)
- Availability of lethal agent
- Wish to live vs. wish to die
8Suicidal Intent
- Wish to die (based on self-report and/or
observable behavior - Belief about intent
- Preparatory behavior
- Prevention of discovery
- Communication of intent
- Higher in completers than attempters
- Predicts reattempt and completion
- Are you sorry that you did not die / glad you are
alive?
9Motivation (What were you hoping would happen
as a result of this?)
- Wish to die or permanently escape psychological
painful situation (1/3 in younger individuals,
but increases with age) - To influence others
- Get attention
- Express hostility or other emotions
- Induce guilt
10Precipitants
- Family discord/conflict
- Abuse
- Romantic attachment disruption
- Legal/disciplinary problems
- Disruption of relationship very high risk for
alcoholic suicides - Assess likelihood of recurrence
11Psychopathology
- Over 80 of attempters and 90 of completers have
at least one Axis I disorder - Most commonly mood disorder
- High risk for bipolar disorder, particularly
mixed state - Substance abuse
- Cluster B disorders
- Conduct disorder
- Comorbidity, chronicity, severity
12Psychological Characteristics
- Hopelessness (dropout, poor treatment response,
attempt) - Impulsivity and aggression (strong predictor of
suicidal behavior, especially in presence of a
mood disorder, familial component) - More
important in suicide earlier in life - Social skills deficits (interpersonal problems)
- Homosexuality, bisexuality (bullying, family
rejection) - Inflexibility (in older suicides)
13Suicide Continuum
Passive Death Wish
Suicidal Ideation, no method
Suicidal Ideation with method
Attempt
Completion
Gesture
14Assessing Current Safety
- Assess the presence or absence of suicidality and
the degree of severity (frequency, intensity,
duration) over the past 48 hours or since last
visit. - Negotiate Safety Plan.
- Collaborate and review this plan with family.
- If family conflict is a common precipitant to
suicidality or self harm, help teen and family
negotiate a truce.
15Elements of the Safety Plan
- Research suggests a signed written contract is
not meaningful to patients. - The safety plan is preferable to the no-suicide
contract-- it is more than a promise not to act
on suicidal thoughts. - The safety plan is a detailed plan for dealing
with a suicidal crisis. - The safety plan is tailor-made for the teen with
the teen and parents. - Includes the phone numbers of trusted adults,
therapist, 24-hour emergency coverage.
16Developing the Safety Plan
- Negotiate with teen to defer acting on suicide
for a specified period in order to try other
potential solutions he/she may not have
considered. - Therapist and teen identify vulnerability factors
(social contexts, events, themes, songs,
substances, etc.) that tend to trigger suicidal
thinking. - Negotiate with teen to avoid activities that may
increase suicidal feelings for a period of time.
17Developing the Safety Plan (Cont.)
- Safety plan includes coping strategies to use in
a suicidal crisis. - Develop a coping card with written strategies
and instructions in case of emergency, which teen
agrees to carry. - Involve parents family may need to agree to call
a truce on hot topics until teen is stable. - Assess teens confidence in his/her ability to
follow the safety plan.
18Developing Safety Plan (Cont.)
- Discuss ALL possible obstacles to keeping the
safety plan. - Problem-solve these obstacles with teen and
parents. - Trust your clinical instincts (eye contact, body
language) if you doubt teen is sincere.
19Hopelessness
- Address hopelessness about treatment first.
- On a scale of 1-10, how hopeful are you that we
can help you? What would increase/decrease it? - Establish concrete, realistic, achievable goals.
- Reasons for living.
- Predict bumps in the road to prevent undue
discouragement.
20Secure Lethal Agents
- Find out motivation for gun ownership.
- Find out who owns the gun.
- Negotiate most secure situation possible.
- Parental regulation of medication.
21Self-Injurious Behavior
22Distinguishing SIB from Suicidal Behavior
- Suicidal behavior is distinct from SIB in terms
of motivation, intent, and lethality. - Suicidal behavior is accompanied by some degree
of wish to die and intent to die i.e. the
patient believes that the behavior will possibly,
or will definitely, result in death. - Carefully assess motivations (to die, to escape,
to influence someone, to communicate feelings, to
relieve emotional distress, and intent (what was
the expected outcome of the behavior?)
23Prevalence of SIB
- Community samples in the U.S. vary in estimates
from 4 to 38 of adolescents. - Among patients with eating disorders, 34.6 had a
life-time rate of SIB (N376) (Paul et al, 2002). - Canadian study found 13.9 of urban and suburban
high school students had self-injured (Ross
Heath, 2002). - A British report noted a 65 increase in SIB
disclosures to national childrens hotlines from
1999 to 2004.
24Types of Self-Injury
- Superficial self-injurious behavior (SIB) such as
self-cutting, scraping, burning (associated with
Cluster B personality disorders, eating
disorders, stress disorders) - Repetitive Stereotypical Behavior such as head
banging and self biting (associated with
intellectual disability, e.g. MR, autism) - Major self mutilation such as self blinding and
castration (rare occurs in psychotic disorders
and substance intoxication) Harris, JC, 2005
25 Self-Injury
- To relieve distress/anger, pain, loneliness
rather than to die - Often co-occurs with suicidal behavior
26Negotiating Treatment Contract
- Initially patients with history of self-cutting
may not be able to agree to abstain entirely from
SIB. - Explore teens concerns about their SIB and
negative consequences of the behavior to increase
motivation for change (remain non-judgmental). - Negotiate with teen to try specific emotion
regulation strategies first, and to delay cutting
for longer periods after the urge begins. - Negotiate with teen to avoid triggers for
self-injury.
27Understanding Self-injurious Behavior
- SIB is identified by the patient as non-suicidal,
and is typically aimed at relieving distress. It
is marked by - An irresistible impulse to self-harm
- Mounting agitation no escape from tension
- Cognitive constriction- no alternatives
considered - Rapid, temporary relief following the act of self
injury
28Functions Self-injury may Serve
- Escape or reduce painful emotions
- Distract from painful memories or thoughts
- Self-expression of emotions
- Punishment of self
- Tension reduction/Anger reduction
- Get attention, social support, or help
- To feel alive
29Characteristics of Self-injurers
- The teen may have difficulties
- Labeling their emotions
- Effectively regulating emotions
- Trusting experiences as valid responses to events
(therefore individual searches environment for
cues about how to respond) - Tolerating distress
- Effectively solving problems (Miller, 1999)
30Emotional Vulnerability
- High sensitivity
- Immediate reactions
- Low threshold for emotional reaction
- High reactivity
- Extreme reactions
- High arousal dysregulates cognitive processing
- Slow return to baseline
- Long lasting reactions
- Creates high sensitivity to next emotional
stimulus
31Facts about Self-Injurious Behavior
- It occurs most often in the context of borderline
personality disorder. - High of individuals with BPD have self injured
(65-85). - Can occur in the context of MDD without BPD.
- Occurs also in developmentally disabled.
- It is often a hidden behavior.
32Facts about SIB (continued)
- Although it has a restorative value, it is
often accompanied by shame. - It is primarily NOT a manipulative behavior.
- Precipitant is often interpersonal rejection or
disappointment in self that leads to self
condemnation. - Intent is primarily to affect INTRApersonal not
INTERpersonal state.
33Facts about SIB (continued)
- Individuals who self injure can distinguish most
of the time whether the behavior is a suicide
attempt or SIB. - Individuals who engage in SIB are at greatly
increased risk for suicidal behavior. - SIB is the most predictive risk factor for
suicide attempts.
34What We See in the Teen
- Critical, hostile statements toward self and
feelings of guilt, shame, anger when experiencing
strong emotions - These reactions serve to intensify the pain of
the original emotion and further support the
self-critical backlash
35Creating a Validating Therapeutic Environment
- Therapist validates the emotional need behind the
behavior. - Therapist must non-judgmentally acknowledge
destructiveness of teens behavior. - Youre doing the best you can, and you can do
better. - Therapist refrains from criticizing the
individual but instead elicits negative
consequences about specific behaviors from teen.
36Treatment Guidelines
- Establish safety plan
- Increase likelihood of adherence
- Determine appropriate level/intensity of care
- Increase hopefulness about treatment
37Treatment Guidelines (continued)
- Increase protective factors (family connection)
- Coping plan, hope kit
- Conduct chain analysis of the attempt
- Target most relevant individual and environment
factors to the suicide attempt, especially
emotions and cognitions lead to attempt
38Strategies
- Distinguish between SIB and suicide attempt
- Chain Analysis
- Determine the precipitants and functions of the
SIB
39Strategies (continued)
- Develop understanding of why precipitants provoke
SIB and strategies to counteract (if cognitive
distortions develop alternative explanations
and challenges) - Develop other means of providing the function of
SIB (if function is emotion restoration and
regulation then develop emotion regulation
skills)
40Chain analysis as a Guide to Case
Conceptualization
- A form of behavioral analysis
- Translation of the behavior problem (SIB) into
links in the chain of emotions, events,
behavior and consequences - Assessing at a micro-level to reconstruct the
sequence in time
41Chain Analysis as a Guide
- Start by asking teen to walk you through the
events that led up to the self-injury. - Help teen identify vulnerability factors that may
have contributed. - Ask teen to describe in detail the precipitants,
thoughts, images, and feelings they may have
experienced as well as what was going on
outside. - Ask about () and (-) consequences of the SIB.
42Links in the Chain
- Vulnerability factors
- Triggering event
- Emotions
- Thoughts (self-talk)
- Physical sensations
- Urges
- Behavior
- Consequences
43Forming Conceptualization
- The specific vulnerabilities, self-statements,
and feelings (internal factors), as well as the
triggering events and consequences of the SIB
(external factors), will help you to develop
the case conceptualization and treatment plan.
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46Prioritize Treatment Needs
- Through chain analyses, the therapist decides
which skill areas to target first - Emotion regulation skills
- Cognitive restructuring
- Family conflict
- Communication skills
- Problem-solving
- Social skills/assertiveness skills
47 BREAK !
48Emotion Education
- Learning to be nonjudgmental toward self
- Teach teen how to observe and describe different
emotions, without labeling them as good or bad,
but simply to be aware of them. - Emotion dysregulation results often because teen
is overly harsh toward self for having strong
feelings, and may often judge specific feelings
as wrong, or invalid, and feel more distressing
emotions in turn.
49Emotion Education (continued)
- Action urges and choices
- A negative emotion often leads to an irresistible
urge to act in a self-destructive manner. - Important to teach teen that just because they
have urge to act on a distressing emotion they
are not obligated to act in this way. - Distinguish between urge to act and the
action itself.
50Reducing Vulnerability to Negative Emotion
- Parents and teens should be taught how to
decrease vulnerabilities. - Emphasis on importance of maintaining regular
sleep schedule. - Eating balanced diet, treating physical illness,
getting regular exercise, avoiding substance
abuse and planning at least one activity a day
that elicits a sense of competence and mastery.
51HEAR ME
- Health (treat physical illness)
- Exercise regularly
- Avoid mood altering drugs
- Rest (balanced sleep)
- Mastery (one rewarding activity daily)
- Eating (balanced diet)
52Emotions Thermometer
53Mindfulness of current emotion
- Steps in the process
- 1. Observe your emotion
- 2. Experience your emotion
- 3. You are not your emotion
- 4. Practice accepting your emotion
54Mindfulness
- 1. Observe your emotion
- Note its presence just observe it
- Step Back
- Get Unstuck from the emotion
55Mindfulness
- 2. Experience Your Emotion
- As a wave, coming and going
- Try not to block or suppress the emotion
- Dont try to get rid of the emotion
- Dont push it away
- Dont try to keep the emotion around
- Dont hold on to it
- Dont intensify it
56Mindfulness
- 3. Remember You are not your emotion
- Do not necessarily act on your emotion (that is,
let destructive action urges pass). - Remember times when you have felt different.
57Mindfulness
- 4. Practice accepting your emotion
- Do not judge your emotion as wrong, bad, too
painful, unfair, embarrassing, etc. - Do not criticize yourself for feeling the
emotion. - Accept your emotion as it is in the moment.
58Chain Analysis as an Intervention The Freeze
Frame Technique (Wexler, 1991)
- Takes the chain analysis a step further
- Recalls events as if reviewing a video replay and
then freezing the frame at critical points. - Helps teen to slow time down (especially useful
for teens who are impulsive and cant remember
what happened) .
59Freeze Frame (continued)
- Needs-Important to teach teen that if they can
identify their needs and learn different
behaviors to get their needs met, they can have
more power. - Once you know the needs, you are smarter. Once
you have new tools for handling the needs, you
are more powerful (Wexler, 1993).
60Freeze Frame (continued)
- The Freeze Frame differs from the chain analysis,
and becomes an intervention with the final step - The teen replays the scene and replaces the
problem behavior with the new coping skills, and
then imagines a new outcome.
61Educating Family about Freeze Frame
- The Freeze Frame approach is the basis for
generating options and interventions with regard
to emotion dysregulation. - We can use this approach to examine emotion
dysregulation that occurs interpersonally between
family members.
62Break
63Distress Tolerance Skills
- Vital skill to teach teen as they will not always
be able to decrease painful emotions, or get what
they need interpersonally, so they will need to
learn how to tolerate distressing emotions.
64Distress Tolerance Skills
- Teaching teens to suspend judgment an emotion
simply is - Teaching teens to accept painful feelings vs.
trying to get rid of them quickly
65Distress Tolerance Skills
- CBT component of Distress Tolerance
- Acceptance self-talk
- Learning to talk to yourself nonjudgmentally e.g.
Im doing the best I can, I know if I can just
get through this difficult time things will get
better. - Acceptance self-talk counters the negative,
critical shoulds that often accompany painful
emotions.
66Distress Tolerance Skills
- Main emphasis is teaching teens how to soothe
themselves . - Teens may be resistant to this, as their relation
to the world is predominantly action and other
oriented.
67Distress Tolerance Skills
- Some teens have belief that others should soothe
them when distressed and have difficulty
believing that they can depend on themselves. - Others may feel that they dont deserve to be
soothed and may feel guilty, ashamed, angry when
they try to self-soothe (Linehan, 1993) .
68Self-Soothing Throughthe Five Senses
- An accessible and easily taught
self-soothing/distress tolerance skill is the use
of the 5 senses - Vision, hearing, smell, taste, touch
- Usually at least 2-3 of the five senses are
engaged or capable of being engaged at any given
moment as a distraction from distress.
69Sensory Soothing (continued)
- Vision
- Focus on an aspect of nature, or any visual
detail - Hearing
- Music, nature sounds, relaxation tape, fan noise
- Smell
- Lotion, candle, perfume, favorite food cooking
- Taste
- Hot chocolate or tea, ice creamtaste slowly
- Touch
- Pet your dog, cat, soothing bath, hug, blanket
70Helping Parents Regulate Their Emotions When in
Conflict with Teen
- Teach strategies for changing the timing and
process of confrontations. - Important to educate parents that when teen
attacks and parent becomes dysregulated then
parent can no longer be effective in enforcing
rules and consequences. - Teens will escalate their behavior in an attempt
to control outcome of mood and outcome of the
interaction (Sells, 1998).
71Facilitating a Validating Family Environment
- Help both parents and teen to understand how
their reactions to each other may be
unintentionally invalidating. - Kernel of Truth
- Coaching parents to become more aware of the ways
in which their communication may be overly
negative and critical. - Validation isnt agreeing with and doesnt have
to be warm and fuzzy.
72Family and Social Protective Factors in
Adolescents
- Parent-child connection
- High parental expectations
- Parental supervision and availability
- School connection
- Religious affiliation
- Non-deviant peer group
73Education
- Educate parents and families about difference
between SIB and suicide attempt - Does not usually require psychiatric
hospitalization unless patient is actively
suicidal - It is not primarily attention seeking
74Education
- It is a serious behavior, can serve as a gate
to suicidal behavior and therefore, needs
treatment - In the context of a suicidal person, can be a
compromise to stave off suicide attempt
75Strategies to Help Parents Respond Calmly
- Strategies to help parents respond calmly and
nonreactively to their teens provocations during
conflict - Exit and Wait
- Staying short and to the point, using deflectors
76Communication Skills
- Active Listening (verbal and non verbal skills)
- Therapist models listening skills
- Sending clear messages ( use of I statements
instead of you - Practice/role play in session
77Changing Emotion by Acting Opposite the Current
Emotion
- Every emotion has an action associated with it.
- Fear Run
- Anger.. Attack
- Sadness..Withdraw
- Shame.Hide
78Changing Emotion by Acting Opposite the Current
Emotion
- Opposite Action
- Emotion is strongly influenced by our bodily
posture and facial expressions. - By altering posture, behavior and facial
expressions, we can delay, interrupt or
de-escalate the progression of a problematic
emotion.
79Opposite Action for Anger
- Keep ones palms open when inclined to punch.
- Whisper when inclined to scream.
- Breath deeply and slowly rather than angrily
hyperventilating. - Gently avoid the person you are angry with rather
than attacking. - Put yourself in the other persons shoes, and
imagine sympathy or empathy for the person,
rather than blame.
80Opposite Action for Guilt or Shame
- Repair the mistake.
- Say youre sorry
- Make up for what you did to the person you
offended - Try to avoid making the same mistake in the
future. - Accept the consequences for what you did.
- Then let it go.
81Opposite action for Sadness or Depression
- Get active
- Approach, dont avoid
- Do things that make you feel effective and
self-confident - Use the half-smile
82Steps to practice using opposite action
- What emotion am I experiencing?
- What is the action (what is the emotion trying to
get me to do)? - Do I really want to reduce this emotion?
- What is the opposite action?
- DO the opposite action.
- Practice, practice, practice!
83Summary
- Important to assess most severe episode of
suicidal thoughts or behavior and evaluate the
precipitants and motivations. - Important to gather history of suicidal thoughts
and behaviors in all patients. - Gather current information and history of
self-injurious behaviors or urges.
84Summary (continued)
- Establish safety plan with teen and family. If
conflict has been a precipitant, work with family
to call a truce. - Evaluate possible reinforcers for the teen to
continue self-injurious behaviors (what does
he/she get or gain). Remain non-judgmental.
85Summary (continued)
- Decrease vulnerability factors
- Teaching Use of Freeze Frame (chain analysis)
- Teach Emotion Regulation skills to teen and
parents. - Enhance Family Communication skills
86Summary (continued)
- Self-soothing skills
- Helping parents regulate their emotions when in
conflict. Strategies to help. - Changing Emotion by opposite action technique
- Distress Tolerance Skills
87We acknowledge with gratitude the Pennsylvania
Legislature for its support of the STAR-Center
and our outreach efforts.This presentation may
not be reproduced without written permission
from STAR-Center Outreach, Western Psychiatric
Institute and Clinic, 3811 OHara Street,
Pittsburgh, PA 15213. (412) 687-2495All Rights
Reserved, 2007