Adolescents, families and schools: A triangulated approach to understanding nonsuicidal self-injury
thesis
posted on 2017-04-19, 00:42authored byLauren Kelada
Nonsuicidal
self-injury (NSSI) is the direct and intentional destruction of body tissue
without the intention to end one’s life and is typically engaged in to regulate
emotion. Family factors may contribute to understanding why NSSI onsets in
adolescence and provide a means by which NSSI prevention and intervention can
occur. The relationship between NSSI and family functioning is dynamic; poor
family functioning can be an antecedent to NSSI, and in turn, NSSI can impact
family functioning and the wellbeing of parents. Self-injury research requires
better understanding of these dynamic relationships, and how the family can
assist recovery from NSSI. In addition, NSSI is often brought to the attention
of school mental health staff before the parents, which creates challenges for
schools and families. Parents are dissatisfied with the communication from schools
while school mental health staff are at a loss when encountered with
self-injuring students. Such findings regarding NSSI, families and schools have
been consistent across several western countries. Nevertheless, international
research regarding NSSI is rare. Therefore the current thesis used an
international, triangulated approach to understand NSSI among adolescents, and
to inform how families and schools can assist prevention, intervention, and
ultimately, recovery. The thesis addressed four main aims: 1) to understand how
family functioning – both adolescent and parent reported – relates to NSSI and
recovery from NSSI; 2) to cross-nationally compare the experiences of NSSI
among young people and their parents; 3) to understand the impact that NSSI has
on parents and the family; 4) to explore how school mental health staff can
address NSSI.
The aims of the thesis were achieved in five papers. In paper
1, 272 Australian adolescents completed a self-report questionnaire; results
indicated that poorer family functioning and emotion regulation were related to
NSSI, and lack of recovery from NSSI. Expanding on this, paper 2 reported the
dyadic self-report data from Australian adolescents and their parents: 117
dyads participated, and in 23 of these the adolescent reported a history of
self-injury. Parents were typically unaware of how poorly family functioning
was perceived by their adolescent who self-injured. Paper 3 aimed to
qualitatively understand the experience of young people who self-injure, their relationship
with their parents, and their feelings toward recovery. This paper also aimed
to compare the experiences of young people in Australia (n=48), Belgium (n=25)
and the United States (n=25), which were found to be similar. Young people were
ambivalent about recovery, and wanted their parents to remain calm and
understanding when responding to NSSI. Moving from the experiences of young
people to their parents, paper 4 reported qualitative data gathered from 16
Australian parents and 22 parents in the US. Parents felt uncertain about how
to resume normal family functioning after they discovered their child’s NSSI,
and were fearful that conflict would lead to another NSSI episode. The
Australian parents were then asked about their experiences with school mental
health staff, the results of which are presented in paper 5. Additionally, 19
school mental health staff members participated in interviews inquiring about
their experiences with students who self-injure and their parents. Parents were
favourable in their assessment of school mental health staff, but wanted more
support to be directed at them as parents. However, the school mental health
staff reported that their primary role was to support the students, not the
parents. The results of the five papers have implications for individual and
family-based prevention and intervention initiatives, as well education
programs for parents, school mental health staff, and external mental health
professionals.