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Impact of Web-Based Sharing and Viewing of Self-Harm–Related Videos and Photographs on Young People: Systematic Review
(2021-03)
Given recent moves to remove or blur self-harm imagery or content on the web, it is important to understand the impact of posting, viewing, and reposting self-harm images on young people.
Objective:
The aim of this ...
mHealth Interventions for Self-Harm: Scoping Review
(2021-04)
Background: Self-harm is a growing issue with increasing prevalence rates; however, individuals who self-harm do not often
receive treatment. Mobile health (mHealth) interventions are a possible solution to some of the ...
Using digital monitoring alongside psychosocial interventions in patients who self-harm
(2021-05)
With more than 200,000 presentations to hospital for self-harm each year in England, there is a clear requirement to reduce self-harm and improve well-being in this population. This service evaluation examined the potential ...
Interventions to reduce self-harm on in-patient wards: systematic review
(2021-04)
Background
Incidents of self-harm are common on psychiatric wards. There are a wide variety of therapeutic, social and environmental interventions that have shown some promise in reducing self-harm in in-patient settings, ...
Self-harm on a specialist adult eating disorder unit: a retrospective cohort study of patient characteristics and outcomes
(2021-06)
Deliberate self-harm (DSH) is common but rarely studied
among inpatients with eating disorders. We sought to investigate
the frequency of DSH among inpatients in a specialist adult eating
disorders unit, and the association ...
Direct costs of hospital care of self-harm: A national register-based cohort study
(2021-11)
Objective
To estimate national direct hospital costs associated with treatment of self-harm and to analyse whether costs differ with respect to demographic and clinical characteristics.
Methods
A cohort design was applied ...
Beating Adolescent Self-Harm (BASH): a randomised controlled trial comparing usual care versus usual care plus a smartphone self-harm prevention app (BlueIce) in young adolescents aged 12–17 who self-harm: study protocol
(2021-11)
Introduction A mobile app, BlueIce, was codesigned with young people with a history of self-harm to provide them with more accessible and available evidence-based support at times of distress. A preliminary evaluation found ...