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Self-harming behaviors in prison: a comparison of suicidal processes,self-injurious behaviors,and mixed events
Authors:Hayden P. Smith  Robert J. Kaminski  Jenelle Power  Karen Slade
Affiliation:1. Department of Criminology &2. Criminal Justice, University of South Carolina, Columbia, USA;3. Correctional Service of Canada &4. Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada;5. Department of Psychology, Nottingham Trent University, Nottingham, England
Abstract:Self-harming behaviors occurring in prison disproportionately consume resources and cause considerable disruption. To date, theoretical paradigms have explained self-injurious behaviors and suicidal processes either via a continuum or dichotomy of self-harm. This current study examines all documented acts of self-harm (n = 1,158) occurring in South Carolina’s 28 prisons over a 50-month period. We test and find support for a tripartite schema of self-harm; differentiated with regard to suicidal processes, self-injurious behaviors, and a ‘mixed group‘ of self-harming behaviors. These groups of behaviors were distinct with regard to situational variables (i.e. body part targeted, injury severity) as well as institutional responses (i.e., medical treatment needed, employment of suicide protocols). Findings indicate that self-injurious behaviors are likely to result in physical injury and/or hospitalizations.
Keywords:Self-injurious behaviors  suicide  incident reports  prison inmate  count models
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