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19-06-2018

Reciprocal Risk: the Longitudinal Relationship between Emotion Regulation and Non-suicidal Self-Injury in Adolescents

Auteurs: Kealagh Robinson, Jessica A. Garisch, Tahlia Kingi, Madeleine Brocklesby, Angelique O’Connell, Robyn L. Langlands, Lynne Russell, Marc S. Wilson

Gepubliceerd in: Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology | Uitgave 2/2019

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Excerpt

Approximately 18% of adolescents have, without suicidal intent, deliberately engaged in self-injury (Muehlenkamp et al. 2012). For many people who self-injure, NSSI is an adolescent-limited behaviour (Klonsky 2011). The onset of NSSI typically ranges from 12 to 15 years old (Andover et al. 2010; Nixon et al. 2008), prevalence peaks at approximately 15 to 16 and then begins to decline during young adulthood (Plener et al. 2015). Converging evidence from self-report (Edmondson et al. 2016), ecological momentary assessment (Muehlenkamp et al. 2009), and experimental manipulation (Franklin et al. 2010) demonstrates that non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI) functions as a strategy to manage emotional distress. …
Voetnoten
1
As the number of adolescents who identified as transgender in the sample is too small to draw informative statistical conclusions, subsequent analysis will compare only participants who identified as either male or female.
 
2
Note that although gender and age were measured at T1, logically neither NSSI nor emotion regulation can prospectively predict gender and so these cross-sectional relationships were modelled with single-headed arrows.
 
3
In order to assess the role of continuity of NSSI prior to T1, the cross-lagged model described above was re-analysed with Lifetime NSSI at T1 (i.e., all young people who reported at T1 a lifetime history of NSSI) predicting T2 Recent NSSI and T2 Emotion Regulation. A similar pattern of results was found.
 
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Metagegevens
Titel
Reciprocal Risk: the Longitudinal Relationship between Emotion Regulation and Non-suicidal Self-Injury in Adolescents
Auteurs
Kealagh Robinson
Jessica A. Garisch
Tahlia Kingi
Madeleine Brocklesby
Angelique O’Connell
Robyn L. Langlands
Lynne Russell
Marc S. Wilson
Publicatiedatum
19-06-2018
Uitgeverij
Springer US
Gepubliceerd in
Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology / Uitgave 2/2019
Print ISSN: 2730-7166
Elektronisch ISSN: 2730-7174
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10802-018-0450-6