“People in my life just play different roles”: A retrospective qualitative study of friendships among young adults who self-harmed during adolescence
Delfina Bilello, Ellen Townsend, Matthew R. Broome, Stephanie Burnett Heyes, Sriya Iyer, Sriya Iyer, Sriya Iyer

TL;DR
This study explores how friendships influence and are influenced by self-harm in young adults who self-harmed during adolescence.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the interdependent relationship between friendships and self-harm in adolescents.
Findings
Friendships can both contribute to and protect against self-harm progression.
Self-harm influences the evolution and dynamics of friendships during adolescence.
Friendships acquire specific meanings and expectations in the context of self-harm.
Abstract
Self-harm is a global public health concern presenting increasing rates in recent years, especially among young people. This population seldom access formal help, and typically rely on informal sources of support, mainly friends. The role, importance and meaning of friendships in the context of self-harm remains poorly understood, highlighting the need to explore young people’s lived experiences. In the present study we conducted semi-structured retrospective qualitative interviews, prompted by the Card-sort Task for Self-Harm About Friends (CaTS-AF), to explore the experiences of 11 young adults (M=19.09; SD=0.70; M=2, F=9) who self-harmed during adolescence. Data were analysed using Reflexive Thematic Analysis (RTA). Three themes were developed which consider 1) the role of friendships in self-harm progression; 2) the role of self-harm in friendship evolution; and 3) the meaning of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSuicide and Self-Harm Studies · Child and Adolescent Psychosocial and Emotional Development · Insect and Pesticide Research
