The Psychiatrist (2008) 32: 60-63. doi: 10.1192/pb.bp.106.012070
© 2008 The Royal College of Psychiatrists
Harm minimisation after repeated self-harm: development of a trust handbook
Nicky Pengelly, Ward Manager
North York shire Forensic Psychiatry Service, York
Barry Ford, Nurse Consultant in Psychosocial Interventions
Selby and York Primary Care Trust, Bootham Park Hospital, York
Paul Blenkiron, Consultant in Adult and Community Psychiatry
Selby and York Primary Care Trust, Bootham Park Hospital, Bootham, York
YO30 7BY, email:
paul.blenkiron{at}nyypct.nhs.uk
Steve Reilly, Consultant Psychiatrist and Psychotherapist
Selby and York Primary Care Trust, Bootham Park Hospital, York
Declaration of interest
None.

Introduction
Repeated self-harm without suicidal intent occurs in approximately
2% of
adults (
Meltzer et al,
2002). Service users report that
professionals can respond to
self-harm with unhelpful attitudes
and ineffective care. Although evidence for
effective treatments
is poor (
Hawton et
al, 1999), this therapeutic pessimism is
not found in the
self-help approaches promoted by voluntary
organisations such as Mind:
If you feel the need to
self-harm, focus on staying within safe
limits (
Harrison & Sharman,
2005).
User websites frequently offer advice on harm minimisation:
Support the person in beginning to take steps to keep
herself safe and
to reduce her self-injury — if she wishes
to. Examples of very valuable
steps might be: taking fewer
risks (e.g. washing implements used to cut,
avoiding drinking
if she thinks she is likely to self-injure)
(
Bristol Crisis Service for Women,
1997).
Recent studies suggest manual-assisted cognitive—behavioural therapy
can be a cost-effective method of reducing self-harming behaviour
(Fagin, 2006). Our
conversations with local mental health workers revealed that many did not feel
skilled, comfortable or empowered to discuss harm minimisation strategies with
service users. Staff were concerned that this approach could be construed as
encouraging self-harm, leaving them open to complaints.
For these reasons, we decided to develop a handbook for use within Selby
and York Primary Care Trust to promote collaborative working between people
who repeatedly self-harm and front-line health professionals. This paper
specifically focuses on the issues that arose surrounding harm
minimisation.

Method
The
Alternatives to Self-harm Service User Handbook
(
Pengelly & Ford, 2005;
for further details and guidelines for its use contact N.P.)
was developed to
assist in the engagement, formulation and
early stages of intervention with
working-age adults. The content
was based on the following sources:
- the scientific literature and Cochrane database
- professional and user-led websites
- interviews with 6 service users who had long histories of self-harm
- correspondence with 6 nurse consultants and 4 managers in other areas of
Britain (these were personal contacts of the authors and/or known to be
involved in developments within self-harm teams). Two units, the Manchester
Deliberate Self-Harm Team and the Maudsley Crisis Recovery Unit, supplied
documentation on their approach to self-harm
- multidisciplinary discussion at meetings of the York and Selby Primary Care
Trusts Clinical Governance Committee.
The self-harm handbook uses a cognitive-behavioural model
(Beck, 1976) to address causes
and maintenance cycles for repeated self-harm. Within each section (Box 1)
users are encouraged to write personalised responses.
A draft was sent for local consultation to 3 user groups (MIND, Mainstay
and Survive) and 20 mental health professionals (including 9 psychiatrists and
4 professionals from psychological therapies). We obtained a legal opinion
from the York and Selby Primary Care Trusts solicitor regarding the
specific inclusion of advice on harm minimisation within a National Health
Service (NHS) publication. This solicitor reviewed information currently
available to the public on websites including NHS Direct and the Mental Health
Foundation, and consulted with another legal colleague. We then requested
comments from the Royal College of Psychiatry, and Nursing and Midwifery
Council.

Results
Thirteen professionals and six service users provided written
feedback, and
the handbook was modified accordingly. The range
of views on harm minimisation
is summarised below.
Service users views
Box 2 contains quotations from community and in-patient service users
regarding their experiences of care following self-harm. Most believed that
guided self-help advice was well overdue: If this handbook had been
available a few years ago, I may not have had the scars I have now.
Users valued an accessible resource they could work through with professionals
that encouraged coping strategies and new patterns of thinking. Users
supported a harm minimisation approach as a shift in professional
attitudes away from expecting users to stop self-harming
altogether, towards more realistic goals such as reducing the number of
episodes of self-harm and/or severity of injuries.
| Box 1. Areas covered in the Alternatives to Self-Harm handbook
(Pengelly & Ford,
2005)
Myths about self-harm
- Providing factual information. Promoting discussion of beliefs and
attitudes held by self and others
Looking after yourself
- Identifying support networks. Establishing crisis plans before exploratory
work
Understanding your self-harm
- Identifying links between life events, current circumstances and
self-harm
- Clarifying the thoughts, feelings and behaviours that maintain
vulnerability to self-harm (vicious circle or flower)
- Understanding triggers to self-harm and its consequences
- Summarising understanding through stories, diagrams or pictures, e.g.
drawing a personal map
Finding alternatives to self-harm
- Information about options for therapy and self-help groups
- Working on painful life events: structured problem-solving
- Techniques to change thoughts, feelings and behaviours: diaries, identify
and test out more helpful beliefs and actions
- Comforts and distractions. Using support. Setting goals
- Harm minimisation (Box 3)
What next?
- Promoting choice about what and when to change
- Developing an action plan. Recording achievements
- Some resources, websites and further reading
|
A psychiatrists view
The handbook is a well-reasoned approach to a wide-spread problem.
We should feel comfortable in not judging someones behaviour as good or
bad. Individuals often do not tell their friends or family and borderline
personality disorder is common (Ferreira de
Castro et al, 1998). If our only approach is to say
"dont do it at all" then many will find that unhelpful and
may not continue to access services. It would be impractical (and probably
unlawful) to detain everyone who self-harms under the Mental Health Act 1983.
Access to specialist psychotherapy often depends upon individuals first
achieving stability and coping strategies. A structured approach can assist
this (Blenkiron & Milnes,
2003). However, there is a difference between telling individuals
that some people find alternatives helpful and recommending that they use
alternatives. The decision to self-harm must always be the patients.
Any integrated approach also needs to address the underlying
causes.
| Box 2. Care following acts of self-harm: service users
comments
- I need time to talk to someone with a good understanding after I
self-harm
- I want self-responsibility, with medication not being forced
- I value being involved in decisions about my treatment
- I want trust and choice (regarding removal of potentially harmful
objects)
- Privacy and dignity are important to me
- High observation levels increase my desire to self-harm and made me
angry
- Removing my personal belongings makes me feel punished and resentful and
more determined to self-harm
- Staff with a positive attitude — professional and supportive —
are the most helpful
|
A psychodynamic psychotherapists view
The handbook takes a "common sense" approach to
self-harm and reads as a supportive and helpful document. Much of it I would
endorse but I would omit the sections on damage limitation and alternative
forms of self-harm. There is a legal argument that suggesting alternative
forms of self-harm may be cited as encouraging someone to injure themselves.
There are also psychological and/or psychodynamic reasons why I think these
sections are unnecessary and might be risky as they could be misinterpreted or
used to excess. Snapping rubber bands on wrists, pinching or using
toothbrushes on skin could lead to bruising or bleeding. Hitting with pillows
may cause injuries. Taking a bath a little hotter or colder than usual could
result in burns or hypothermia. Squeezing ice is ill-advised and biting into
something strongly flavoured could lead to some highly dangerous and creative
choices. Advice to use clean, sharp instruments when cutting will, I suspect,
have no impact on those who deliberately choose dirty pieces of glass or rusty
blades. Similarly, some people choose to cut where there is a risk of damaging
a large artery, vein or other important structure. The personal meaning of
self-harm and the motivation behind this behaviour need to be explored with
the patient. Unconscious determinants of self-injuring behaviour might not
respond in predictable ways to simple advice on alternatives to self-harm and
damage limitation.
A general medical view
There are precedents in medicine that support harm minimisation when advice
to avoid risky behaviours is rejected. Doctors can legally prescribe the
contraceptive pill to competent girls under 16 years of age without parental
consent, when unprotected intercourse is likely
(Gillick v. West Norfolk and
Wisbech Area Health Authority, 1985). In sport, the
clinicians duty to users of performance-enhancing drugs includes
discouraging reckless dosing, ensuring access to needle exchange and
appropriate monitoring (British
Medical Association, 2002). Maintenance treatment with methadone,
buprenorphine or injectable heroin is advocated for opiate addiction
(National Treatment Agency for Substance
Misuse, 2003).
A solicitors view
I am bound to say that the safest legal position is to tell people
not to self-harm and/or detain them so as to prevent it. However, I suspect
practitioners will think these options are often unrealistic. The handbook
does represent a broadly lawful approach. Implementing it will put the Trust
at the cutting edge of the legal and medical fields. Reasonable arguments
exist which could defend potential legal challenges, as follows:
- Suicide Act 1961: it is a criminal offence to aid, abet, counsel or procure
someone elses suicide. A practitioner may believe they are assisting
someone to harm themselves more safely but the Crown Prosecution Service may
see matters differently if professionals are reckless as to whether the
patient dies.
- The Human Rights Act 1998: Article 2 of the European Convention on Human
Rights (the right to life) and Article 3 (provision against torture, cruel,
inhumane or degrading treatment) will not be breached where it can be shown
the handbook represents medical treatment given in the patients best
interests.
- Assault and battery: the handbook should emphasise that the professional
does not want the patient to harm themselves but understands their choice to
do so. Harm minimisation probably cannot be practised with patients incapable
of giving informed consent.
- Negligence: a civil claim for damages could be dealt with if supported by a
responsible body of medical opinion, even if others take a contrary view
(Bolam v. Friern Hospital
Management Committee,1957).
I cannot guarantee there will be no complaints, but steps can be taken to
address any claims and provide a persuasive defence:
- consult widely regarding harm reduction, for example, consult professional
organisations
- do not provide the means for self-harm to patients
- combine advice on coping with support to address underlying problems
- offer the handbook to specific patients, not the general population
- draw up a multidisciplinary protocol for staff use, including patient
selection, risk assessment, record keeping, clinical review and
audit.
Nursing and Midwifery Council
This is a very difficult and complex issue with no relevant conduct
cases or precedents. The individual should ensure familiarity with the Code of
Professional Conduct, and respond in the most appropriate way in light of the
circumstances. It is essential that the practitioner does not act in isolation
but consults with the rest of the clinical team. Correct in-depth records
should be kept.
Royal College of Psychiatrists
This handbook is commended as a brave attempt to tackle a difficult
area. The General and Community Faculty is unable to provide an established
view concerning harm minimisation in self-harm. Unlike addiction, there is no
evidence base so the use of alternative strategies must rest on common sense
assumptions, be subjected to clinical scrutiny, and audited.
There is no definitive advice that can be derived from existing College
documents. Any handbook should be used alongside a full psychosocial
assessment, a comprehensive care package and the care programme approach. This
is consistent with the legal view and the College Council Report CR122 on the
Assessment Following Self-harm in Adults
(Royal College of Psychiatrists,
2004). In formulating the Colleges response to the draft
National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) guidelines on
self-harm, we have asked NICE to consider whether explicit guidance on
safe self-harming is appropriate.

Discussion
On balance, we decided that including harm minimisation strategies
in the
handbook was a professionally defensible position. Some
suggestions, for
example taking baths hotter or colder than
normal, were removed. Most advice
on damage limitation was
retained (Box 3). This position was supported by
publication
of NICE guidelines
(
2004) on self-harm (Box 4).
In accordance
with the legal view, we produced multidisciplinary guidelines
in
an accompanying booklet that specifies how staff should
use the handbook.
These emphasise that:
- the handbook is not to be given out as a self-help manual: it is designed
to be worked through with the professional(s) involved
- it is one part of a continuing and comprehensive care plan
- the service user should give informed consent, be aware of the purpose of
the handbook approach, be aware of alternative treatment options, and not be
experiencing symptoms of acute mental illness
- staff should complete a monitoring form in order to audit its use.
The handbook was approved for use within Selby and York Primary Care Trust
by the Mental Health Clinical Governance Committee for Selby and York Primary
Care Trust. It is now available in paper and electronic versions within
working age adult mental health teams. Further training in its use, including
service users, is in progress. Anyone who is considering using the handbook or
any of its guidance should first seek advice and approval from their own trust
before doing so.
In conclusion, the opinions of those reading this article are likely to
reflect a range of views. Some may believe that endorsing any form of
self-harm, even if it is safer, involves collusion with that behaviour. Others
will view the approach as a practical response to the requests of service
users. The handbook helps support professionals working with these dilemmas
who cannot retreat behind a decision that recurrent self-harm is not mental
illness.
| Box 3. Harm minimisation advice in the handbook
Alternatives
- Decide not to self-harm for 10 min, monitor how it feels and what helps
- Kick and punch something soft such as a pillow
- Put rubber bands over your wrists and snap them
- Pinch yourself instead of cutting
- Try physical exercise/exertion, such as walking, gardening, tidying
- Slam doors, scream or sing loudly to music
- Draw on your body with red markers or paint (as an alternative to seeing
blood)
- Squeeze ice for a short time
- Carry safe things with you to squeeze such as a tennis ball, stones
- Use your creativity — try anything that distracts you from self-harm
or increases good feelings, such as yoga, hobbies, talking to friends, phone
support lines
Damage limitation
- Do not take tablets. There are no safe overdoses — even
small overdoses can kill
- If you feel you must cut, only use clean, sharp instruments to reduce the
risk of infection and complications. Keep tetanus protection up-to-date
- Avoid cutting your body where major veins and arteries are close to the
surface
- Never share anything you use to self-injure — sharing risks hepatitis
and HIV
- Always have access to a well-equipped first aid kit and know how to use
it
- Know when to seek medical help, for example for severe injuries, infection
and shock
- Avoid alcohol and drug use as you may inflict worse wounds than
intended
- Gradually reduce the severity of your injuries. Leave more time between
injuries
|
| Box 4. NICE guidance on repeated self-harm
(National Institute for Health and
Clinical Excellence, 2004)
Self-poisoning
- Harm minimisation strategies should not be offered for people who have
self-harmed by poisoning: there are no safe limits
- Where service users are likely to repeat self-poisoning, clinical staff
(including pharmacists) may consider discussing the risks with service users
and carers where appropriate
Self-injury
- Management of self-cutting: for superficial uncomplicated injuries of 5 cm
or less, the use of tissue adhesive should be offered as a first-line
treatment. If the service user expresses a preference for the use of skin
closure strips, this should be offered as an effective alternative
- Advice regarding self-management of superficial injuries, harm minimisation
techniques and alternative coping strategies should be considered for people
who repeatedly self-injure. Suitable reading material is available from many
voluntary organisations
- Discussion with a mental health worker may assist in the decision about
which service users should be offered advice and instructions for the
self-management of superficial injuries, including the provision of tissue
adhesive
- Where service users have significant scarring from previous self-injury,
consider providing information about dealing with scar tissue
|

Acknowledgments
We are grateful to the professionals and service users who gave
their views
on draft versions of the handbook and this article.
We especially thank:
Stephen Evans, Partner, Hempsons Solicitors,
Harrogate, North Yorkshire, David
Hewitt, Partner, Hempsons
Solicitors, London, Joe Nichols, Professional
Advisor for Mental
Health, Learning Disabilities and other vulnerable groups,
Nursing
and Midwifery Council, John Moriarty, Chair, Council Report
on General
Hospital Management of Deliberate Self-harm 2004,
Royal College of
Psychiatrists, London, Jed Boardman, Chair
of General and Community Faculty,
Royal College of Psychiatrists,
London.

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