4.5 Review

Valued attributes of professional support for people who repeatedly self-harm: A systematic review and meta-synthesis of first-hand accounts

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH NURSING
Volume 31, Issue 2, Pages 424-441

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/inm.12969

Keywords

psychotherapy; qualitative research; self-harm; self-injurious behaviour; systematic review; therapeutics

Funding

  1. National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Programme Grants for Applied Research

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Therapeutic interventions, particularly the establishment of therapeutic alliance and professional care, are important for individuals who self-harm. Patients benefit from sharing, talking, and professional concern. The ability to build reciprocal trust, show genuine empathy, and directly respond to self-harm are key attributes for individual professionals. Timeliness, reliability, and patient-centered approaches are essential in all forms of therapy.
Therapeutic interventions are an important adjunct to self-help strategies for people who self-harm. There is little guidance for those offering therapy on the effective components of interventions for people who self-harm. This was a systematic review aiming to identify the factors that contribute to positive experiences of therapy as described by people who have reduced or stopped self-harm. The review followed PRISMA guidelines to locate and synthesize peer-reviewed qualitative studies describing experiences of therapy among people who had reduced or stopped self-harm. Study selection, data extraction, and quality assessment were peer reviewed and conducted for at least two researchers independently. Relevant first-hand quotations were extracted from eligible studies and synthesized using a thematic analysis in collaboration with experts with personal and professional experience of self-harm. Twenty-three studies met eligibility criteria. Themes identified in the reported accounts were arranged under two meta-themes. 'Positive aspects of seeing a professional' identified aspects of professional care that were common to all encounters: the value of sharing, space to talk and reflect, and the boundaries inherent in contact with a professional. 'Positive attributes of individual professionals' depended upon individual characteristics: the ability to build reciprocal trust by being non-judgemental, showing genuine empathic concern, and being confident to talk about and respond directly to self-harm. Our review indicates that therapeutic alliance is perceived as key to effective professional help for self-harm, irrespective of underlying principles of therapy. All forms of therapy should be timely and reliable and centred around the needs of the individual and their experience of self-harm.

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