PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

People engaging in self-harm find support on Reddit. But is that community helping them?

Social posts suggest Redditors view self-injury as a problem but find the behavior addictive

2024-11-06
(Press-News.org) A new study from the University of Georgia suggests people posting in Reddit’s r/selfharm community are likely seeking support for negative emotions.

While sharing traumatic events online can be cathartic, the researchers caution that subreddits can’t provide the same type of mental health help and support face-to-face interactions and professional help can.

“We don’t know the accuracy of the information that’s being shared in these communities about nonsuicidal self-injury,” said Amanda Giordano, lead author of the study and an associate professor in UGA’s Mary Frances Early College of Education. “A client engaging in self-harm may feel as though they have the support they need in their online community and, in turn, may not seek offline help.

“However, there’s evidence to suggest that talking to anonymous strangers online is less effective than seeking support from a trusted person offline.”

Redditors post to share negative experiences, ask self-harm and medical questions

The researchers analyzed a sample of 400 Reddit posts in a subreddit dedicated to the topic of self-harm. At the time, the Reddit forum contained 143,000 members and provided a window into the overall tone and attitude posters have toward self-injury.

The study found that the most common purpose for posting in the self-harm subreddit was to share a negative experience (35.5%), like a misunderstanding with a family member. About one in five posts sought answers to self-harm-related questions like how to hide scars. And 14% of posts included medical questions like how to clean and manage wounds.

More users framed self-harm as a problem rather than a solution. But the number of posts expressing an intention to stop engaging in self-harm was nearly equal to those expressing no intention to stop.

“The majority of posts did not describe why the poster engaged in self-injury, but of those who did, the most common reason was for emotion regulation. They were engaging in self-harm as a way to stop bad feelings and feel better,” said Giordano.

These posts described engaging in self-harm as a response to distress from specific life events, including breaking up or falling out with family members, or as a response to strong negative emotions, such as depression, self-hatred, loneliness, low self-esteem, shame or anxiety.

The sample of posts in the subreddit revealed that the most common method of self-injury was cutting, with only 10% of posts referencing methods other than cutting, such as burning, scratching, head banging, punching and more.

Users may view self-harm as an addictive behavior

The study also found that addiction-related language, like “relapse” and “clean,” appeared in more than a quarter of the posts, indicating that a substantial number of users view self-harm as an addiction.

More than 42% of the posts from the study indicated that the poster was currently engaging in self-harm. The study found about one in five posts revealed the poster was no longer injuring themselves.

About 12 posts indicated the poster had never self-harmed but was curious about it, while 1% revealed it was the poster’s first time. 

The researchers found a significant correlation between whether the poster viewed self-harm as a problem or a solution and that poster’s intention to stop the behavior.

Counselors and mental health professionals can help clients shift their perspective from thinking about self-harm as the solution to managing psychological pain to recognizing that self-injury doesn’t solve the issue causing their emotional distress and instead adds additional risk.

“Then the work would be around increasing their motivation to change and to find alternative, more adaptive ways of regulating their emotions outside of self-harm,” Giordano said.

Published by the International Journal for the Advancement of Counselling, the study was co-authored by UGA’s J’haria Dallas, Lauren Hearn and In Kee Kim. Additional co-authors include Bradley McKibben and Donatella Luciani-Hill.

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

The egg or the chicken? An ancient unicellular says egg!

The egg or the chicken? An ancient unicellular says egg!
2024-11-06
Chromosphaera perkinsii is a single-celled species discovered in 2017 in marine sediments around Hawaii. The first signs of its presence on Earth have been dated at over a billion years, well before the appearance of the first animals. A team from the University of Geneva (UNIGE) has observed that this species forms multicellular structures that bear striking similarities to animal embryos. These observations suggest that the genetic programmes responsible for embryonic development were already present before the emergence of animal life, ...

Coping and resilience aids parents of disabled children, study says

2024-11-06
OXFORD, Miss. – For parents of children with disabilities, finding time to focus on themselves may be difficult. However, a new study finds that the right coping strategies and resilience can significantly help manage the challenges of raising children with special needs.  That is the key finding from research published in the International Journal of Developmental Disabilities that studied families with neurodevelopmentally disabled children in Ghana to see what helps parents cultivate healthy, happy lives for themselves and their children.   “Our main interest ...

Lupus Research Alliance announces inaugural recipients of Translational Bridge Award

2024-11-06
New York, NY. November 6, 2024. The Lupus Research Alliance (LRA) is excited to announce the first-ever recipients of the Translational Bridge Award (TBA), established this year to accelerate the translation of groundbreaking research into potential treatments and diagnostics for lupus. The award aims to propel high-potential projects from LRA-funded foundational discoveries with strong commercialization potential or an opportunity for clinical evaluation. Five exceptional researchers have been awarded the 2024 Translational Bridge Award to tackle pressing ...

Brain stars hold our memories

2024-11-06
A study published in Nature by researchers at Baylor College of Medicine changes the way we understand memory. Until now, memories have been explained by the activity of brain cells called neurons that respond to learning events and control memory recall. The Baylor team expanded this theory by showing that non-neuronal cell types in the brain called astrocytes – star-shaped cells – also store memories and work in concert with groups of neurons called engrams to regulate storage and retrieval of memories. “The prevailing idea is that the formation and recall of memories only involves neuronal engrams that are activated by certain ...

Imaging nuclear shapes by smashing them to smithereens

Imaging nuclear shapes by smashing them to smithereens
2024-11-06
UPTON, N.Y. — Scientists have demonstrated a new way to use high-energy particle smashups at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) — a U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science user facility for nuclear physics research at DOE’s Brookhaven National Laboratory — to reveal subtle details about the shapes of atomic nuclei. The method, described in a paper just published in Nature, is complementary to lower energy techniques for determining nuclear structure. It will add depth to scientists’ understanding of the nuclei that make up the ...

AI-driven mobile robots team up to tackle chemical synthesis

AI-driven mobile robots team up to tackle chemical synthesis
2024-11-06
Researchers at the University of Liverpool have developed AI-driven mobile robots that can carry out chemical synthesis research with axtraordinairy efficiency. In a study publishing in the journal Nature, researchers show how mobile robots that use AI logic to make decisions were able to perform exploratory chemistry research tasks to the same level as humans, but much faster. The 1.75-meter-tall mobile robots were designed by the Liverpool team to tackle three primary problems in exploratory chemistry: performing the reactions, ...

New haptic patch transmits complexity of touch to the skin

New haptic patch transmits complexity of touch to the skin
2024-11-06
A Northwestern University-led team of engineers has developed a new type of wearable device that stimulates skin to deliver various complex sensations. The thin, flexible device gently adheres to the skin, providing more realistic and immersive sensory experiences. Although the new device obviously lends itself to gaming and virtual reality (VR), the researchers also envision applications in healthcare. For example, the device could help people with visual impairments “feel” their surroundings or give feedback to people with prosthetic limbs. The ...

Safety of simultaneous vs sequential mRNA COVID-19 and inactivated influenza vaccines

2024-11-06
About The Study: In this randomized clinical trial assessing simultaneous vs sequential administration of mRNA COVID-19 and inactivated influenza vaccines, reactogenicity was comparable in both groups. These findings support the option of simultaneous administration of these vaccines.  Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Emmanuel B. Walter, MD, MPH, email chip.walter@duke.edu. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/ (doi:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.43166) Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other ...

Long-term risk of autoimmune and autoinflammatory connective tissue disorders following COVID-19

2024-11-06
About The Study: This retrospective cohort study with an extended follow-up period found associations between COVID-19 and the long-term risk of various autoimmune and autoinflammatory connective tissue disorders. Long-term monitoring and care of patients is crucial after COVID-19, considering demographic factors, disease severity, and vaccination status, to mitigate these risks. Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Solam Lee, MD, PhD, email solam@yonsei.ac.kr. To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website ...

Mount Sinai researchers have uncovered the mechanism in the brain that constantly refreshes memory

Mount Sinai researchers have uncovered the mechanism in the brain that constantly refreshes memory
2024-11-06
Mount Sinai researchers have discovered for the first time a neural mechanism for memory integration that stretches across both time and personal experience. These findings, reported in Nature, demonstrate how memories stored in neural ensembles in the brain are constantly being updated and reorganized with salient information, and represent an important step in deciphering how our memories stay current with the most recently available information. This discovery could have important implications for better understanding adaptive memory processes ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Foraging on the wing: How can ecologically similar birds live together?

Little birds’ personalities shine through their song – and may help find a mate

Primate mothers display different bereavement response to humans

New pollen-replacing food for honey bees brings new hope for survival

Gene-based blood test for melanoma may catch early signs of cancer’s return

Common genetic variants linked to drug-resistant epilepsy

Brisk walking pace + time spent at this speed may lower risk of heart rhythm abnormalities

Single mid-afternoon preventer inhaler dose may be best timing for asthma control

Symptoms of ice cold feet + heaviness in legs strongly linked to varicose veins

Brain areas necessary for reasoning identified

Growing wildflowers on disused urban land can damage bee health

Rapid rise in vaping in Britain has stalled

Young minds, big ideas: Florida’s first Invention Convention ignites innovation at USF

New study reveals how to make prescribed forest fires burn safer and cleaner

Inactive components in agricultural runoff may be hidden contributors to drinking water hazards

Colombia’s peatlands could be a crucial tool to fight climate change. But first we have to find them

Researchers refine a hybrid music therapy intervention for patients with cardiac and pulmonary conditions

Research Spotlight: Combining dexmedetomidine with spinal anesthesia prolongs pain relief and decreases shivering during surgery

Pennington Biomedical’s 2025 Bray Obesity Symposium to offer on-demand continuing education for physicians

Unlocking faster orthodontic treatments: the role of atf6 in bone remodeling

SwRI-led Lucy mission survey of main belt asteroid Donaldjohanson imminent

New bat cell lines and reagents help to study bat antiviral immune responses against hantaviruses and coronaviruses

Preterm birth might be predicted with high accuracy with new cheap, non-invasive test, based on cell-free DNA collected in standard early pregnancy testing

CVD researcher/clinician named editor-in-chief of Circulation: Genomic and Precision Medicine.

Holy shift: More Americans finding faith outside church

New analysis underscores health risks of e-cigarettes

USTC develops high-performance biomimetic proton gating system

Uncovering the molecular drivers of liver cancer

A bowling revolution: Modeling the perfect conditions for a strike

Simulate sound in 3D at a finer scale than humans can perceive

[Press-News.org] People engaging in self-harm find support on Reddit. But is that community helping them?
Social posts suggest Redditors view self-injury as a problem but find the behavior addictive