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Note: the content of this Web article may be triggering for those
who self-injure.
Treating
SI
Obviously, the first line of care is to treat any medically significant
injuries the SI sufferer inflicts in a setting that does not threaten
her or his dignity or autonomy. Since self-injurers are often seen repeatedly
in emergency rooms and other urgent care settings, they are often seen
as problem patients, and even, in some instances, refused treatment or
treated harshly, dismissively or judgmentally. [36]
All such approaches intensify the self-injurer's already high level of
distrust of authoritarian and manipulative people. Avoiding such attitudes
can be crucial to the patient's long-term well being, since resistance
to seeking help for a significant injury at a future date might prove
health endangering if not life threatening. While SI is not a suicidal
behavior, it is potentially hazardous enough to cause an unintended death.
A recent study of 233 adults, a majority of whom had experienced childhood
abuse and/or had self-injured, concluded that there were four guiding
principles for emergency workers to follow in dealing with SI sufferers:
- Return control to the patient, to whatever degree is possible.
The goal is not to assume control, but to help the patient
regain control.
- Help the patient assess self-capabilities. (See following
section).
- Help patient shore up self-capabilities.
- Help patient determine the precipitating event to the
self-injury. This can help the patient see the behavior
as explicable, and not hopelessly uncontrollable.[37]
Deiter, et. al. consider it central to the treatment of SI among
survivors of trauma and childhood abuse that three self-capabilities be
established or re-established in the patient:
· The
ability to tolerate strong affect (emotional states)
· The
ability to maintain a sense of self-worth
· The
ability to maintain a connection with others[38]
The key to treatment of SI is teaching the client new ways of addressing
the stresses that precipitate incidents of self-injury. For that reason,
brief hospitalization to control the behavior is one of the least successful
approaches. While it prevents the SI sufferer from self-injuring during
the duration of the hospital stay, it may well allow the stresses that
brought on the SI event to build. That is likely to cause another SI event
once the patient leaves the hospital.
One obvious caveat is that the patient is determined not to be suicidal.
Suicidality is present in SI populations as well as most other definable
patient populations, and must be excluded as a possibility. One possible
determinant is the method of injury that brought the patient to the emergency
room. Those who practice SI rarely use the same technique in attempting
suicide.
There is
no consensus on how best to treat SI. A review of studies
by a team of British researchers found that there were no large-scale
trials or replication of results to favor any particular approach.[39]
Some anecdotal or small-scale successes have been shown for a variety
of interventions:
- Hospital-based
inpatient treatment programs specifically for SI are rare. One,
SAFE Alternatives at Edwards Hospital in Napierville, IL,
is reserved for patients whose self-injury has reached a
life-threatening level. The Menninger Clinic in Topeka, KS,
lists self-harm among its programs and Rock Creek Hospital
in Lemont, IL, offers an inpatient self-injury program.[40]
- Studies
to date on psychopharmacological treatment of SI have focused
primarily on stereotypic SI in autistic and retarded individuals. The efficacy of selective serotonin reuptake
inhibitors (SSRIs) atypical neuroleptics and opiate antagonists –the
classes of drugs used in those trials—has not been established
in moderate/superficial SI treatment.
- Dialectical
Behavioral Therapy (DBT) in SI patients diagnosed with BPD
is a highly structured, intensive, psychotherapy technique
focusing on emotional regulation and behavioral self-ntrol
that shows promise of reducing the incidence of SI events. It
was pioneered at the University of Washington in Seattle, and
there are DBT trained therapists elsewhere in the country.
- Individual psychotherapy with a knowledgeable and patient
therapist can help alleviate SI behavior
- Hypnotic relaxation techniques employed by a qualified hypnotherapist
as an adjunct to other treatments have been used with some
reported success.
- Other techniques not specifically related to SI, but relevant
for addressing conditions that underlie self-injuring behavior
include Interpersonal Group Therapy for treatment of BPD; Rational-Emotive
Therapy for anger control, and therapies directed at the treatment
of Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. [41]
[36] Deiter,
P., Nicholls, S., and Pearlman, L., Self-Injury and Self
Capacities: Assisting an Individual in Crisis, Journal
of Clinical Psychology, 2000: 56(9) 1173-1191, available
at http://www.psybermagus.ukf.net/sanatorium/files/deiter.pdf.,
Accessed 1/11/2005
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