BMJ 2002;325:281 ( 3 August )

Letters

General practice based interventions to prevent repeat episodes of deliberate self harm

    GPs have to manage this problem
    Pictures of self injury misrepresent published trial

GPs have to manage this problem

The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below.

EDITOR---The disappointing results of Bennewith et al's study are not particularly surprising.1 The intervention that they used (an offer of contact and an educational handout) was not beneficial in 11 previous studies.2 Indeed, no intervention has been effective in reducing future deliberate self harm, even when conducted by motivated researchers. This is probably because of the difficulty in overcoming the unpredictable future adverse circumstances of people who harm themselves.
 
(Credit: P MARAZZI/SPL)

General practitioners require a much more powerful tool than a handout to manage this complex group of patients. There is also an important methodological problem with the study concerning the population under study, as the authors have captured not only those who have made many attempts at harming themselves, whose motivation is self injury but not death, but also those who have made an unsuccessful serious suicide attempt.

The study has important lessons. Clearly most patients visit their general practitioner . . . [Full text of this article]


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This article has been cited by other articles:

  • Kapur, N., Cooper, J. (2005). Self harm was misrepresented (again). BMJ 330: 1026-1026 [Full text]  



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