Transcript
Dr Dennis Ougrin Hello, my name is Dennis Ougrin. I’m a Professor of Child Psychiatry based at Queen Mary University of London. I would like to say a few words about self-harm in young people. Self-harm, especially the type that results in the presentation to Emergency Room, as far as we could say, is the strongest known predictor of death by suicide. We have recently published NICE guidelines, which, essentially, is a way of thinking about assessing and treating self-harm in young people, and I wanted to highlight a few new things in these guidelines, especially about assessment and treatment.
When it comes to assessment, it is now clear that a timely and multidisciplinary assessment is of great importance. I should also add that adding a therapeutic component to it, trying to understand self-harm, trying to make sense of what has happened, and thinking about the way forward, could be a very useful addition to the assessment. We know from a number of research studies that therapeutic assessment improves engagement of young people with treatment.
In terms of treatment, then, for the first time, our NICE guidelines recommended a particular psychological therapy for those young people with severe and multiple self-harm. That therapy is called DBT for Adolescents, which stands for dialectical behaviour therapy. There is a good amount of evidence from adults that that psychological therapy works to reduce self-harm in adults, and we now have relatively good evidence base to say that DBT for Adolescents seems to reduce self-harm in adolescents too, at least in the short-term. DBT, however, is a fairly expensive psychological therapy, and we are not certain about the long-term benefits of it.
Another important consideration when thinking about treatment is whether to focus on self-harm as such, or whether to focus on other psychological or psychiatric difficulties that the young person has. The decision is not straightforward. In some cases, it is clear that self-harm and all of the symptoms that go with it, like emotional dysregulation, needs to be the primary target of psychological therapy. But there are some young people in whom we should really be thinking about targeting other psychiatric disorders that they might have, such as, depression, anxiety, ADHD, autism and others.
The decision is often clinical and needs to be driven by a number of factors the severity of self-harm, the severity of other disorders that the young person has, the impacts of self-harm and other disorders on the young person’s life. By life, I mean their function at home with their families, at school, with after school activities, and friendships, and, also, perhaps the availability of psychological therapies and other types of treatment.
Final – the final thing I wanted to say about both assessment and treatment is that it is very important to offer timely interventions. We used to be thinking about seeing a young person within seven days, after they present with self-harm to the Emergency Rooms. The new guidelines talk about providing some sort of follow-up within 48 hours in those young people where there is significant concern. Now, that type of follow-up could be with specialist teams, or it could be with other professionals, like GPs or primary care professionals.
Now, that is a very sensible recommendation, in the sense that we know that the period immediately after an episode of significant self-harm which results in hospital presentation, is the period of the greatest risk of completing suicide. And so, thinking about configuring services in such a way that could provide timely, immediate follow-up for young people who come with self-harm to Emergency Rooms is very important.
So, to summarise, self-harm is of great importance as a predictor of suicide. Assessments need to be timely, done by the right mix of people and need to be therapeutic. We need to offer relatively immediate follow-up for young people who come to hospital with self-harm, and the decision needs to be taken whether to treat self-harm or other psychiatric disorders. And then, if the decision is to treat self-harm and it’s severe and repetitive, then DBT, which is dialectical behaviour therapy for adolescents, is probably the best psychological therapy we have at the moment.