Deakin University
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Rumination, Substance Use, and Self-Harm in a Representative Australian Adult Sample

journal contribution
posted on 2024-08-23, 00:11 authored by RJ Tait, J Brinker, CI Moller, DJ French
BackgroundThere are few data on self‐harm in the general population, especially examining the roles of rumination and substance use.ObjectivesTo evaluate the inter‐relationships of rumination, self‐harm, and potential mediating variables.MethodA cohort with follow‐up every 4 years involving a random sample of adults aged 20–24 and 40–44 years (at baseline) living in Australia. The survey included items on three common forms of self‐harm. Other measures included rumination, Goldberg Anxiety and Depression scales, substance use, coping style (Brief COPE), and demographic risk factors.ResultsThe sample comprised 2,184 women and 1,942 men with 287 self‐harm cases (7.0%). Depression and coping style were significant mediators of rumination on self‐harm for men, with depression being the only robust mediator for women. For males, age and education were also significantly associated, while for women, age, smoking, trauma, and sexual abuse were significant.ConclusionsMen and women differ on mediators of self‐harm.

History

Journal

Journal of Clinical Psychology

Volume

70

Pagination

283-293

Location

United States

ISSN

0021-9762

eISSN

1097-4679

Language

English

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

3

Publisher

WILEY