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Risk factors of self-injury behavior among psychiatric inpatients

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

S. Hentati
Affiliation:
Hedi Chaker University Hospital, Psychiatry “C” department, Sfax, Tunisia
M. Maâlej Bouali
Affiliation:
Hedi Chaker University Hospital, Psychiatry “C” department, Sfax, Tunisia
L. Zoauri
Affiliation:
Hedi Chaker University Hospital, Psychiatry “C” department, Sfax, Tunisia
N. Zouari
Affiliation:
Hedi Chaker University Hospital, Psychiatry “C” department, Sfax, Tunisia
J. Ben Thabet
Affiliation:
Hedi Chaker University Hospital, Psychiatry “C” department, Sfax, Tunisia
M. Maâlej
Affiliation:
Hedi Chaker University Hospital, Psychiatry “C” department, Sfax, Tunisia

Abstract

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Background

Self-injury behavior among mental patients has been recognized for several years, yet our understanding of its mechanisms and its risk factors remains limited.

Objectives

This study aimed to assess the prevalence of deliberate self-harm (DSH) among psychiatric inpatients and to identify its association with personal and clinical factors.

Methods

It was a descriptive and analytic study. It included 87 psychiatric inpatients followed in the psychiatry department “C” at the Hedi Chaker University Hospital of Sfax in Tunisia. Barratt Impulsivity Scale (Bis11) and the 28-items Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ) were used to assess respectively impulsivity and child maltreatment.

Results

The average age of patients was 29.32 ± 8 years. Most of them were male (75%) and single. Fifty-nine percent of patients had previously attempted suicide. A history of DSH was found in 60.9% of cases. The most frequent trauma types were emotional abuse and physical neglect with respectively 58.7% and 69.8%. Factors positively correlated with DSH were: male gender (P = 0.026), father alcoholism (P = 0.024), history of suicide attempts (P = 0.017), borderline personality (P = 0.00) and history of emotional abuse (P = 0.008) or physical abuse (P = 0.04) or neglect (P = 0.004). Score “Bis11” was significantly correlated with suicide attempts (P = 0.00) and presence of childhood abuse (P = 0.00) or neglect (P = 0.01).

Conclusion

DSH seems to be a prevalent problem among psychiatric inpatients. It concerns mainly patients with a history of child abuse and impulsive behavior such as suicidal attempts underlying borderline personality disorder. Patients with these risk factors warrant specific attention in mental health services.

Disclosure of Interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
e-Poster Viewing: Epidemiology and social psychiatry
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2017
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