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Hidden Pain? People with learning disabilities who self-injure

Hidden Pain? People with learning disabilities who self-injure. Pauline Heslop Norah Fry Research Centre, University of Bristol Fiona Macaulay Bristol Crisis Service for Women. What do we already know?. People without learning disabilities Research considering their views exists

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Hidden Pain? People with learning disabilities who self-injure

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  1. Hidden Pain?People with learning disabilities who self-injure Pauline Heslop Norah Fry Research Centre, University of Bristol Fiona Macaulay Bristol Crisis Service for Women

  2. What do we already know? • People without learning disabilities • Research considering their views exists • Self-injury has a clear function • It is largely used as a coping strategy for dealing with intense emotional distress • Interventions: usually counselling or therapies, to enhance self-esteem / develop a repertoire of coping skills • People with learning disabilities • Little or no research considering their views • Self-injury generally understood within a biological framework • Regarded as ‘challenging behaviour’ • Interventions: often behavioural responses and sometimes medication

  3. The purpose of the research • To find out more about the experiences of people with learning disabilities who self-injure, and their carers/supporters • To explore in what ways they have been supported by the services and professionals with whom they are involved • To identify ideas, and then produce resources, for training and policy development

  4. Research participants 25 people with learning disabilities (104 visits) • Men and women • Ages 14 – 65 (mean age = 34 years old) • England, Scotland, Wales and N. Ireland • Range of types of self-injury • Range of circumstances (own home – secure unit) Family members 7 linked to participants, 5 non-linked Professionals 21 linked to participants, 9 non-linked

  5. What people with learning disabilities say about why they self-injure 1. The circumstances leading up to self-injury 2. The feelings a person has before they self-injure 3. The particular functions that self-injury serves

  6. The circumstances leading up to self-injury External factors Being in disempowering circumstances Lack of control within living environment Interpersonal factors Being bullied Arguments Internal factors Physical health issues Memories of difficult past experiences

  7. The circumstances leading up to self-injury: External factors Being in disempowering circumstances • Not feeling listened to • Being told off • Being told what to do • Too many demands and not enough support • Being treated like a child • People talking about you

  8. The circumstances leading up to self-injury: External factors Lack of control within living environment • Other residents • Noise/too much going on • Lack of autonomy • Not much to do

  9. The circumstances leading up to self-injury: Interpersonal factors Being bullied • Physically • Picked on • Name calling • Making fun of person • Being laughed at

  10. The circumstances leading up to self-injury: Interpersonal factors Arguments • Arguing with someone else • Overhearing other arguments

  11. The circumstances leading up to self-injury: Internal factors Physical health issues • Physical illness • Mobility impairment • Tiredness, exhaustion

  12. The circumstances leading up to self-injury: Internal factors Memories of difficult experiences in the past • Abuse • Bereavement

  13. The circumstances leading up to self-injury

  14. The circumstances leading up to self-injury

  15. The circumstances leading up to self-injury

  16. The feelings a person has before they self-injure

  17. The feelings a person has before they self-injure

  18. The feelings a person has before they self-injure

  19. The function or meaning of self-injury

  20. The function or meaning of self-injury

  21. The function or meaning of self-injury

  22. Conclusions • There are external, interpersonal and internal factors that might lead up to a person self-injuring • People with learning disabilities, family carers and professionals may understand these factors differently • Family carers and professionals need to acknowledge anger on the part of people with learning disabilities • Bullying, the legacy of abuse and dealing with one’s emotions all need addressing as a matter of urgency • Difficult feelings ought not be dismissed as ‘attention-seeking’

  23. Messages from people with learning disabilities to supporters • Better communication • Better attitude towards us • Need for practical support too • Help to learn new strategies for distraction • Help to calm down • Access to support when needed

  24. Fiona Macaulay Bristol Crisis Service for Women PO Box 654 Bristol BS99 1XH Fiona.bcsw@btconnect.com Pauline Heslop Norah Fry Research Centre University of Bristol 3 Priory Road Bristol BS8 1TX Pauline.Heslop@bristol.ac.uk For further information…

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