Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 The epidemiology of youth suicide
- 2 Suicide and the “continuum of adolescent self-destructiveness”: is there a connection?
- 3 Adolescent attempted suicide
- 4 Familial factors in adolescent suicidal behavior
- 5 Biological factors influencing suicidal behavior in adolescents
- 6 Psychodynamic approaches to youth suicide
- 7 Cross-cultural variation in child and adolescent suicide
- 8 An idiographic approach to understanding suicide in the young
- 9 Assessing suicidal behavior in children and adolescents
- 10 Suicide prevention for adolescents
- 11 Cognitive behavioral therapy after deliberate self-harm in adolescence
- 12 Follow-up studies of child and adolescent suicide attempters
- 13 Children and adolescents bereaved by a suicidal death: implications for psychosocial outcomes and interventions
- Index
- References
11 - Cognitive behavioral therapy after deliberate self-harm in adolescence
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 December 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- 1 The epidemiology of youth suicide
- 2 Suicide and the “continuum of adolescent self-destructiveness”: is there a connection?
- 3 Adolescent attempted suicide
- 4 Familial factors in adolescent suicidal behavior
- 5 Biological factors influencing suicidal behavior in adolescents
- 6 Psychodynamic approaches to youth suicide
- 7 Cross-cultural variation in child and adolescent suicide
- 8 An idiographic approach to understanding suicide in the young
- 9 Assessing suicidal behavior in children and adolescents
- 10 Suicide prevention for adolescents
- 11 Cognitive behavioral therapy after deliberate self-harm in adolescence
- 12 Follow-up studies of child and adolescent suicide attempters
- 13 Children and adolescents bereaved by a suicidal death: implications for psychosocial outcomes and interventions
- Index
- References
Summary
Circumstances of suicidal attempts
The kinds of cognitive behavioral interventions that are provided for adolescents who have taken a deliberate overdose, or who have deliberately harmed themselves in other ways, will depend to a large extent on the circumstances in which attempts occur. These include (1) acute problems that are faced by the young person; (2) the chronic problems that they face; (3) the presence of psychiatric disorders such as depression; and (4) the thoughts associated with suicidal attempts.
Acute problems
Many episodes of self-poisoning or self-harm in young people are preceded by stressful events. In a study in Manchester, England, adolescents who had deliberately poisoned themselves were found to have experienced a much greater level of personal difficulties in the three months prior to the episode than matched subjects from the general population (Kerfoot et al., 1995). In particular, they were more often reported to have problems with friendships, to be poor school-attenders, and to be having arguments with members of their families. Very commonly, there was some kind of quarrel with a key person in the young person's life. An example was an adolescent girl who had a chronically poor relationship with her mother. She had been out late repeatedly. One morning her mother confronted her and was very critical of her. The girl took a large overdose of paracetamol later that day.
Chronic problems
Many of the problems that adolescent suicide-attempters must deal with are chronic, that is, have been present for several months.
Keywords
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- Suicide in Children and Adolescents , pp. 251 - 270Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2003
References
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