Young, Black women are significantly more likely to self-harm than
people from other ethnic groups,
according
to new research published in the September issue of the
British Journal of Psychiatry.
And people from Black and minority ethnic
groups are less likely to receive specialist psychiatric assessment
and access to follow-up services after an episode of self-harm than
people from the White population. Researchers from the universities
of Manchester and Oxford, who carried out the research, are calling
for self-harm services to become more “culturally sensitive”.
The researchers studied 14,997 people who
attended emergency departments in three cities – Derby, Oxford and
Manchester – having self-harmed. They found that rates of self-harm
in young Black women were highest in all three cities. For example,
the rate of self-harm among young Black women is Manchester was
10.3 per 1000 people, compared to 6.6 per 1000 in the White
population.
In contrast, rates of self-harm in young Black
men in the three cities did not differ significantly from those in
young White men. There were lower rates of self-harm in older Black
people of both genders compared to White people.
The researchers also found that young Black
women were slightly less likely to receive a specialist psychiatric
assessment after self-harming than White women. Furthermore, men
and women from both Black and minority ethnic groups were less
likely to re-attend at hospital with further episodes of
self-harm.
Dr Jayne Cooper, of the Centre for Suicide
Prevention at the University of Manchester and lead author of the
research, said: “To our knowledge, this is the first study to show
significantly higher rates of self-harm in young Black females
across a number of cities using large population-based databases.
We cannot be certain why this is, but it’s possible that young
Black women who self-harm are experiencing more social problems.
For example, in our study young black women were more likely to be
unemployed and report housing problems than White women. We also
found that people from ethnic minority groups who self-harmed were
more likely to be students than their White counterparts, and so
may be under academic pressure.”
Dr Cooper continued: “Despite the increased
risk of self-harm in young Black females, we found that fewer
receive psychiatric care. One explanation is that they are seen as
being at ‘low risk’ clinically of self-harming again – because they
are less likely to live alone, less likely to have used alcohol
during the self-harm attempt, and less likely to have a previous
history of self-harm. They may also not communicate their distress
to clinical staff as much, and be less likely to admit to
depression. It has also been suggested that Black and minority
ethnic groups may find themselves disillusioned with the services
they receive, and so be reluctant to return to hospital if they
self-harm again.”
Dr Cooper concluded: “Our findings have
important implications for how we design services for people who
self-harm. The challenge is to make services more culturally
sensitive, and ensure that everyone receives assessment and
appropriate management following self-harm.”
For further information, please contact Liz Fox or Deborah
Hart in the Communications Department.
Telephone: 020 7235 2351 Extensions. 6298 or 6127
References:
Cooper J, Murphy E, Webb R, Hawton K, Bergen H, Waters K and Kapur N (2010) Ethnic differences in self-harm, rates, characteristics and service provision: three-city cohort study, British Journal of Psychiatry, 197: 212-218.