Table 4.
Type of NSSI | Percentage (%) of participants |
---|---|
Severely scratched or pinched with fingernails or other objects to the point that bleeding occurs or marks remain on the skin | 72.4% (n = 55) |
Cut wrists, arms, legs, torso or other areas of the body | 50% (n = 38) |
Banged or punched objects to the point of bruising or bleeding | 44.6% (n = 33) |
Punched or banged yourself to the point of bruising or bleeding | 44.6% (n = 33) |
Bitten yourself to the point that bleeding occurs or marks remain on the skin | 41.2% (n = 31) |
Intentionally prevented wounds from healing | 38.2% (n = 29) |
Ripped or torn skin | 34.2% (n = 25) |
Burned wrists, hands, arms, legs, torso or other areas of the body | 30.1% (n = 22) |
Rubbed glass into skin or stuck sharp objects such as needles, pins and staples into or underneath the skin (not including tattooing, body piercing or needles used for medication use) | 27.6% (n = 21) |
Carved words or symbols into the skin | 20.5% (n = 15) |
Engaged in fighting or other aggressive activities with the intention of getting hurt | 11% (n = 8) |
Tried to break your own bones | 8.2% (n = 6) |
Ingested a caustic substance(s) or sharp object(s) (bleach, other cleaning substances, pins, etc.) | 6.8% (n = 5) |
Banging head against walls, hard surfaces | 6.8% (n = 5) |
Broke your own bones | 2.7% (n = 2) |
Dripped acid onto skin | 2.7% (n = 2) |
Pulled out hair, eyelashes or eyebrows (with the intention of hurting yourself) | 1.7% (n = 1) |
Other (avoided taking medication or seeking healthcare as a form of self-harm; tried to choke/strangle myself; took small overdoses of paracetamol or paracetamol; poured boiling water over hands; provoking an animal to bite; trying to get hit by traffic; tried to set myself alight; dropped heavy objects onto myself; tried dropping off heights; masturbated with metal objects that caused me to bleed) | 24.7% (n = 18) |
Bodily site of NSSI | |
Arms | 61.8% (n = 47) |
Hands | 58.1% (n = 43) |
Head | 47.4% (n = 36) |
Wrists | 42.5% (n = 31) |
Face | 35.1% (n = 26) |
Fingers | 31.6% (n = 24) |
Stomach or chest | 31.5% (n = 23) |
Thighs | 28.8% (n = 21) |
Calves or ankles | 14.5% (n = 11) |
Lips or tongue | 13.7% (n = 10) |
Shoulders or neck | 11.8% (n = 9) |
Breasts | 9.2% (n = 7) |
Genitals or rectum | 6.6% (n = 5) |
Feet | 2.7% (n = 2) |
Back | 2.7% (n = 2) |
Eyes | 1.4% (n = 1) |
Initial motivation for NSSI | |
I was angry with myself. | 38.2% (n = 29) |
I accidentally discovered it—I had never seen or heard of it before. | 38.2% (n = 29) |
I was upset and decided to try it | 30.3% (n = 23) |
I was angry with someone else. | 15.1% (n = 11) |
It felt good. | 15.1% (n = 11) |
I wanted someone to notice me and/or my injuries. | 11% (n = 8) |
I cannot remember. | 8.2% (n = 6) |
I wanted to shock or hurt someone. | 27.7% (n = 2) |
It seemed to work for other people I know. | 27.7% (n = 2) |
I did it because I had friends who did it and I wanted to fit in. | 27.7% (n = 2) |
I saw it on a movie/television or read about it in a book and decided to try it. | 27.7% (n = 2) |
I read about it on the internet and decided to try it. | 1.4% (n = 1) |
It was part of a dare. | 1.4% (n = 1) |
Other (‘Whilst not remembering the exact first time, I know it was initially an attempt to FEEL my own self-loathing—to be able to grasp and feel the feeling’; ‘It reduced my stress’; ‘I was having what I now know was a meltdown and did it in desperation to “do” something’; ‘I needed to do so something to ease the pain I felt inside’; ‘I hated myself’; ‘It just happened. It was like a compulsion and I could not control myself at all’; ‘I copied my dad’; ‘I wanted to be humiliated, “told you so”’; ‘I was so stressed’; ‘I just wanted out of the situation I was in’; ‘I was frustrated by other people’s talking and noise and rule-breaking and needed something to distract me’; ‘I was depressed’; ‘Boredom’; ‘I was so frustrated, cornered, it felt like the last resort’; ‘I was trying to understand what had happened to me at a doctor’s surgery’; ‘full of self-hatred and confusion’.) | 21.1% (n = 16) |
Participants report the their methods of self-injury, the bodily areas most commonly targeted and initial motivations for starting