The Lancet Commission on Self-harm
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The Lancet Commissions
Abstract
By delivering transformative shifts in societal attitudes
and initiating a radical redesign of mental health care, we
can fundamentally improve the lives of people who self-harm.
This Lancet Commission is the product of a
substantial team effort that has taken place over the last
five years. It consolidates evidence and knowledge
derived from empirical research and the lived
experience of self-harm. Self-harm refers to intentional
self-poisoning or injury, irrespective of apparent
purpose, and can take many forms, including overdoses
of medication, ingestion of harmful substances,
cutting, burning, or punching. The focus of this
Commission is on non-fatal self-harm—however, in
some settings, distinctions are not this clear cut. Self-harm is a behaviour, not a psychiatric diagnosis, with a
wide variety of underlying causes and contributing
factors. It is shaped by culture and society, yet its
definitions have arisen from research conducted mainly
in high-income countries. The field has often
overlooked the perspectives of people living in low-income and middle-income countries (LMICs) and
Indigenous peoples. Furthermore, unlike suicide
prevention, self-harm has been neglected by govern ments internationally. For these reasons, we set out to
integrate missing perspectives about self-harm from
across the world alongside existing mainstream scien tific knowledge, with the aim of raising the profile of
self-harm in the global policy arena and improving the
treatment of people who self-harm internationally.
There are at least 14 million episodes of self-harm
annually across the world, representing a global rate of
60 per 100000 people per year. This estimate is likely to
be a considerable underestimate, because most people
who self-harm do not present to clinical services and
there are few routine surveillance systems, particularly in
LMICs. Although self-harm can occur at any age, the
incidence is much higher among young people and
within this population, rates appear to be increasing.
Repetition of self-harm is common, and suicide is much
more common after self-harm than in the general
population; 1·6% of people die by suicide within a year
after presentation to hospital with an episode of self-harm. In LMICs, rates of repetition appear to be lower
because pesticide self-poisoning (the most common
method of self-harm in LMICs) has a high case fatality
rate.
For people who self-harm, the behaviour serves a
variety of functions, including self-soothing, emotional
management, communication, validation of identity, and
self-expression. Self-harm practices are also shaped by
social relationships and class dynamics. Indigenous
peoples across the world, especially Indigenous youth,
have high rates of self-harm, with colonisation and
racism playing potentially important roles in driving the
behaviour. Numerous psychological and social factors
are associated with self-harm and the social determinants
of health—poverty, in particular, heavily influences the
distribution of self-harm within all communities. Yet we
know little about how individual-level factors interact
with social context to drive self-harm, or whether an
individual might be more likely to engage in self-harm at
a particular point in time. Furthermore, many of the
biopsychosocial mechanisms underlying self-harm
remain elusive. Granular data capture through Ecological
Momentary Assessment, together with machine learning
and triangulation of data sources, including qualitative
data, could help to shed light on the nature and timing of
self-harm.
Psychological treatments can help some people who
self-harm, but service users and practitioners often
differ in their opinions of what constitutes effective
treatment. Furthermore, treatment provision for self-harm remains highly variable and is often inaccessible,
particularly within LMICs and to Indigenous peoples.
Unfortunately, in many settings, there is a lack of a
caring, empathic response towards people who self-harm, and those living in countries where self-harm
with suicidal intent is deemed a criminal offence can
find themselves liable to prosecution. Even in some
liberal democracies, the police are sometimes used as a
first line of response to people who self-harm,
compounding feelings of stigma.
We have identified 12 key recommendations that, if
actioned, could transform the lives of people who self-harm (panel 1).
We already know that tackling societal drivers such as
poverty, social isolation, and access to means of suicide
can reduce suicide rates—this evidence can also usefully
inform government policy in relation to self-harm. From
a societal perspective, the punishment of people who self-harm must stop internationally, and government
approaches should address the conditions that make
self-harm more likely. For Indigenous peoples,
effective self-harm prevention strategies should prioritise could an emphasis on self-harm surveillance, and a
redistribution of current research funding to places with
the greatest need.
In terms of how we communicate about self-harm, the
online media industry must take greater responsibility
for the safety of their users, particularly young people
and other at-risk users. Discussions about self-harm
should focus on relatable stories of survival, recovery,
coping, and help seeking with an emphasis on practical
strategies. These stories should ideally be designed and
conveyed by people with lived experience of self-harm.
From the perspective of service delivery, people with lived
experience of self-harm should be robustly supported to
lead, design, and deliver models of care.
The recommendations that have emerged from this
Commission are ambitious, but we believe that they can
be achieved with targeted advocacy and the strategic
deployment of resources. Success will require ongoing
efforts by diverse groups across different settings
collectively committed to meaningful engagement and
action in the long-term. Furthermore, existing fragmented,
piecemeal strategies should be replaced with well-coordinated, whole-of-society, and whole-of-government
efforts. These efforts must occur in tandem with better
integrated health and social care services. By acting now,
we believe that it will be possible to achieve a substantial
and meaningful impact on the lives of millions of people
who self-harm.
Description
Research Article
Citation
Moran, P., Chandler, A., Dudgeon, P., Kirtley, O. J., Knipe, D., Pirkis, J., ... & Christensen, H. (2024). The Lancet Commission on self-harm. The Lancet, 404(10461), 1445-1492.
