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The Relationship Between Nonsuicidal Self-Injury and Family Functioning: Adolescent and Parent Perspectives

journal contribution
posted on 2016-07-01, 00:00 authored by L Kelada, P Hasking, Glenn MelvinGlenn Melvin
We explored parent and adolescent reports of family functioning, how this differed if the parent was aware that their child self-injured, and how parental awareness of self-injury was related to self-injury frequency, self-injury severity, and help seeking. Participants were 117 parent-adolescent dyads, in 23 of which the adolescent self-injured. Adolescents who self-injured reported poorer family functioning than their parents, but parents who did not know about their child's self-injury reported similar functioning to parents whose children did not self-injure. Parents were more likely to know that their child self-injured when the behavior was severe and frequent. Help-seeking was more likely when parents knew about self-injury. Family-based interventions which emphasize perspective-taking could be used to effectively treat self-injury.

History

Journal

Journal of marital and family therapy

Volume

42

Pagination

536-549

Location

United States

ISSN

0194-472X

eISSN

1752-0606

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2016, American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy

Issue

3

Publisher

WILEY