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Formerly called self-mutilation, self-injury, or self-harm, nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) is the deliberate and direct alteration or destruction of healthy body tissue without suicidal intent; these behaviors range from skin cutting or burning to eye enucleation or amputation of body parts. NSSI must be deliberate, as opposed to accidental or indirect behaviors—such as overdoses or ingesting harmful substances—that cause injury that is uncertain, ambiguous as to course, or invisible (the injuries do not disfigure observable body tissue).1 NSSI acts are done without an intent to die, although persons who self-harm may have suicidal ideation and passive thoughts of dying.2 Persons who repeatedly engage in NSSI and are demoralized over their inability to control it are at risk for suicide attempts.3
NSSI can be classified as nonpathological or pathological.4 Culturally sanctioned, nonpathological NSSI consists of body modification practices such as tattoos or piercing. Body modification practices may be a sublimation of pathological NSSI. For a description of nonpathological NSSI, see the Box.5 Pathological NSSI typically is a method of emotional regulation. Understanding why patients engage in pathological NSSI and how it is categorized can help guide assessment and treatment.
Body modification practices and rituals are culturally sanctioned forms of nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI). Body modification practices include tattooing and piercing earlobes, nipples, and other body parts to accommodate jewelry. Most practices are harmless but when carried to extremes, they may point to underlying neuroses. For some patients, a tattoo or piercing may be psychologically beneficial—eg, to reclaim one’s body after an attack or rape.5
Body modification rituals, such as head gashing by Sufi healers, penis cutting during aboriginal coming-of-age ceremonies, and Hindu body piercing to attain spiritual goals, are meaningful activities that reflect the tradition, symbolism, and beliefs of a society. These rituals serve an elemental purpose by correcting or preventing destabilizing conditions that threaten people and communities, such as mental and physical diseases; angry gods, spirits, or ancestors; failure of children to accept adult responsibilities; conflicts (eg, male-female, intergenerational, interclass, intertribal); loosening of clear social role distinctions; loss of group identity; immoral or sinful behaviors; and ecological disasters.
These rituals are effective because participants believe they promote healing, spirituality, and social order. Knowledge about body modification practices and rituals in which NSSI is perceived to be therapeutic opens the door to an understanding of pathological NSSI as a form of self-help behavior and allows clinicians to have a more empathic interaction with patients who self-injure.
Why people engage in NSSI
NSSI is best regarded as a pathological approach to emotional regulation and distress tolerance that provides rapid but temporary relief from disturbing thoughts, feelings, and emotions. For approximately 90% of patients, NSSI decreases symptoms, most commonly untenable anxiety (“It’s like popping a balloon”), depressed mood, racing thoughts, swirling emotions, anger, hallucinations, and flashbacks.6,7 In some instances, NSSI generates desired feelings and self-stimulation during periods of dissociation, depersonalization, grief, insecurity, loneliness, extreme boredom, self-pity, and alienation.8,9 NSSI also may signal distress to elicit a caring response from others or provide a means of escape from intolerable social situations.10Table 1 lists factors associated with NSSI.
Table 1
Factors associated with NSSI
High levels of negative and unpleasant thoughts and feelingsa |
Poor communication skills and problem-solving abilitiesb |
Abuse, maltreatment, hostility, and marked criticism during childhoodc,d |
Under- or over-arousal responses to stressb |
High valuation of NSSI to achieve a desired responsee |
Need for self-punishmenta |
Modeling behaviors based on exposure to NSSI among peers, on the Internet—ie, postings on YouTube—and in the mediaf |
NSSI: nonsuicidal self-injury Source: References
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The functional approach
One model of classifying NSSI focuses on the behavioral functions it serves.11,12 In this model, the most common function of NSSI is removal or escape from an aversive affective or cognitive state (automatic positive reinforcement). Automatic negative reinforcement explains using NSSI to generate feelings—eg, by patients with anhedonia or numbness. NSSI also may be used as a signal of distress to gain attention, access helpful environmental resources (social positive reinforcement), or remove distressing interpersonal demands (social negative reinforcement).