Self-Injurious Behavior in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Inpatient Units: Actual Aspects of the Complex Care Provision
Research papers
Sigita Lesinskienė
Vilnius University, Faculty of Medicine, Institute of Clinical Medicine, Clinic of Psychiatry, Vilnius, Lithuania image/svg+xml
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2922-8626
Mariam Afrahi
Vilnius University, Faculty of Medicine, Vilnius, Lithuania image/svg+xml
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3782-2548
Kamilė Pociūtė
Vilnius University, Faculty of Medicine, Institute of Clinical Medicine, Clinic of Psychiatry, Vilnius, Lithuania image/svg+xml
https://orcid.org/0009-0003-9916-4418
Published 2024-12-26
https://doi.org/10.15388/Amed.2024.31.2.7
PDF
HTML

Keywords

self-harm
inpatient units
clinical aspects
children
adolescents

How to Cite

1.
Lesinskienė S, Afrahi M, Pociūtė K. Self-Injurious Behavior in Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Inpatient Units: Actual Aspects of the Complex Care Provision. AML [Internet]. 2024 Dec. 26 [cited 2025 Apr. 26];31(2):275–287. Available from: https://journals.vu.lt./AML/article/view/35329

Abstract

Background: Nonsuicidal self-injurious behavior in children and adolescents is a major concern that requires mental health professionals’ attention. The aim of this study is to analyze clinical care aspects of children and adolescents who self-harm in psychiatric hospitals.
Materials and methods: In 2023, 30 various specialists from five different child and adolescent psychiatric units in Lithuania were interviewed. The survey used a semistructured interview consisting of twelve questions related to complex clinical care methods of children and adolescents who self-harm. The interview responses were summarized and grouped into 5 categories: assessment and monitoring, methods and consequences of self-injury, safety measures, prevention and treatment, insights from staff.
Results: Self-injurious behavior in psychiatric inpatient settings was managed through risk assessment, monitoring, communication, medication, counselling, removal of sharp objects, patient allocation, and a several of other methods such as safety contracts, rewards or alternate pain-inducing or self-harm mimicking stimuli. Despite the hospital’s safety procedures patients frequently devised alternate methods to self-harm, such as hitting and scratching themselves and using nonspecific materials.
Conclusions: The management of self-harm in children and adolescents psychiatric settings remains insufficient. Further research is needed to explore alternative ways of managing self-injurious behavior in child and adolescent psychiatric hospitals.

PDF
HTML
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.