Hospital care and repetition following self-harm: Multicentre comparison of self-poisoning and self-injury

Rachael Lilley, David Owens, Judith Horrocks, Allan House, Rachael Noble, Helen Bergen, Keith Hawton, Deborah Casey, Sue Simkin, Elizabeth Murphy, Jayne Cooper, Navneet Kapur

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Background: Quantitative research about self-harm largely deals with self-poisoning, despite the high incidence of self-injury. Aims: We compared patterns of hospital care and repetition associated with self-poisoning and self-injury. Method: Demographic and clinical data were collected in a multicentre, prospective cohort study, involving 10 498 consecutive episodes of self-harm at six English teaching hospitals. Results: Compared with those who self-poisoned, people who cut themselves were more likely to have self-harmed previously and to have received support from mental health services, but they were far less likely to be admitted to the general hospital or receive a psychosocial assessment. Although only 17% of people repeated self-harm during the 18 months of study, survival analysis that takes account of all episodes revealed a repetition rate of 33% in the year following an episode: 47% after episodes of self-cutting and 31% after self-poisoning (P <0.001). Of those who repeated, a third switched method of self-harm. Conclusions: Hospital services offer less to people who have cut themselves, although they are far more likely to repeat, than to those who have self-poisoned. Attendance at hospital should result in psychosocial assessment of needs regardless of method of self-harm.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)440-445
    Number of pages5
    JournalBritish Journal of Psychiatry
    Volume192
    Issue number6
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Jun 2008

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    • MaSH: Manchester Self-Harm Project

      Clements, C. (Researcher) & Donaldson, I. (Support team)

      1/04/97 → …

      Project: Research

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