Associations of deliberate self-harm with loneliness, self-rated health and life satisfaction in adolescence: Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1986 Study

Background. Deliberate self-harm (DSH) is an act with a non-fatal outcome in which an individual initiates a behaviour, such as self-cutting or burning, with the intention of inflicting harm on his or her self. Interpersonal difficulties have been shown to be a risk factor for DSH, but the associati...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Anna Reetta Rönkä, Anja Taanila, Markku Koiranen, Vappu Sunnari, Arja Rautio
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2013-08-01
Series:International Journal of Circumpolar Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.circumpolarhealthjournal.net/index.php/ijch/article/download/21085/pdf_1
id doaj-c4f4e89b5b3840329e44ef98d95db724
record_format Article
spelling doaj-c4f4e89b5b3840329e44ef98d95db7242020-11-25T01:56:58ZengTaylor & Francis GroupInternational Journal of Circumpolar Health2242-39822013-08-017201710.3402/ijch.v72i0.21085Associations of deliberate self-harm with loneliness, self-rated health and life satisfaction in adolescence: Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1986 StudyAnna Reetta RönkäAnja TaanilaMarkku KoiranenVappu SunnariArja RautioBackground. Deliberate self-harm (DSH) is an act with a non-fatal outcome in which an individual initiates a behaviour, such as self-cutting or burning, with the intention of inflicting harm on his or her self. Interpersonal difficulties have been shown to be a risk factor for DSH, but the association between subjective experience of loneliness and DSH have rarely been examined. Objective. To examine the frequency of DSH or its ideation and loneliness among 16-year-olds to determine if associations exist between DSH and loneliness, loneliness-related factors, self-rated health and satisfaction with life. Design. The study population (n=7,014) was taken from Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1986 (N=9,432). Cross-tabulations were used to describe the frequency of DSH by factors selected by gender. Logistic regression analysis was used to describe the association between DSH and loneliness and other selected factors. Results. Nearly 8.7% (n=608) of adolescents reported DSH often/sometimes during the preceding 6 months, with girls (n=488, 13.4%) reporting DSH almost 4 times than that of boys (n=120, 3.6%). Nearly 3.2% of the adolescents (girls: n=149, 4.1%; boys: n=72, 2.2%) expressed that the statement I feel lonely was very/often true, and 26.4% (girls: n=1,265, 34.8%; boys: n=585, 17.4%) expressed that the statement was somewhat/sometimes true. Logistic regression showed that those who reported to be very/often lonely (girls: odds ratio (OR) 4.1; boys: OR 3.2), somewhat/sometimes lonely (girls: OR 2.4; boys: OR 2.4) were dissatisfied with life (girls: OR 3.3; boys: OR 3.3), felt unliked (girls: OR 2.2; boys: OR 6.0) and had moderate self-rated health (girls: OR 2.0; boys: OR 1.7), were more likely to report DSH than those without these feelings. Conclusion. The results show that loneliness is associated with DSH, and that loneliness should be considered as a risk for individual health and well-being. http://www.circumpolarhealthjournal.net/index.php/ijch/article/download/21085/pdf_1deliberate self-harmlonelinessadolescentsgenderNorthern Finland
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anna Reetta Rönkä
Anja Taanila
Markku Koiranen
Vappu Sunnari
Arja Rautio
spellingShingle Anna Reetta Rönkä
Anja Taanila
Markku Koiranen
Vappu Sunnari
Arja Rautio
Associations of deliberate self-harm with loneliness, self-rated health and life satisfaction in adolescence: Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1986 Study
International Journal of Circumpolar Health
deliberate self-harm
loneliness
adolescents
gender
Northern Finland
author_facet Anna Reetta Rönkä
Anja Taanila
Markku Koiranen
Vappu Sunnari
Arja Rautio
author_sort Anna Reetta Rönkä
title Associations of deliberate self-harm with loneliness, self-rated health and life satisfaction in adolescence: Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1986 Study
title_short Associations of deliberate self-harm with loneliness, self-rated health and life satisfaction in adolescence: Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1986 Study
title_full Associations of deliberate self-harm with loneliness, self-rated health and life satisfaction in adolescence: Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1986 Study
title_fullStr Associations of deliberate self-harm with loneliness, self-rated health and life satisfaction in adolescence: Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1986 Study
title_full_unstemmed Associations of deliberate self-harm with loneliness, self-rated health and life satisfaction in adolescence: Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1986 Study
title_sort associations of deliberate self-harm with loneliness, self-rated health and life satisfaction in adolescence: northern finland birth cohort 1986 study
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series International Journal of Circumpolar Health
issn 2242-3982
publishDate 2013-08-01
description Background. Deliberate self-harm (DSH) is an act with a non-fatal outcome in which an individual initiates a behaviour, such as self-cutting or burning, with the intention of inflicting harm on his or her self. Interpersonal difficulties have been shown to be a risk factor for DSH, but the association between subjective experience of loneliness and DSH have rarely been examined. Objective. To examine the frequency of DSH or its ideation and loneliness among 16-year-olds to determine if associations exist between DSH and loneliness, loneliness-related factors, self-rated health and satisfaction with life. Design. The study population (n=7,014) was taken from Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1986 (N=9,432). Cross-tabulations were used to describe the frequency of DSH by factors selected by gender. Logistic regression analysis was used to describe the association between DSH and loneliness and other selected factors. Results. Nearly 8.7% (n=608) of adolescents reported DSH often/sometimes during the preceding 6 months, with girls (n=488, 13.4%) reporting DSH almost 4 times than that of boys (n=120, 3.6%). Nearly 3.2% of the adolescents (girls: n=149, 4.1%; boys: n=72, 2.2%) expressed that the statement I feel lonely was very/often true, and 26.4% (girls: n=1,265, 34.8%; boys: n=585, 17.4%) expressed that the statement was somewhat/sometimes true. Logistic regression showed that those who reported to be very/often lonely (girls: odds ratio (OR) 4.1; boys: OR 3.2), somewhat/sometimes lonely (girls: OR 2.4; boys: OR 2.4) were dissatisfied with life (girls: OR 3.3; boys: OR 3.3), felt unliked (girls: OR 2.2; boys: OR 6.0) and had moderate self-rated health (girls: OR 2.0; boys: OR 1.7), were more likely to report DSH than those without these feelings. Conclusion. The results show that loneliness is associated with DSH, and that loneliness should be considered as a risk for individual health and well-being.
topic deliberate self-harm
loneliness
adolescents
gender
Northern Finland
url http://www.circumpolarhealthjournal.net/index.php/ijch/article/download/21085/pdf_1
work_keys_str_mv AT annareettarx00f6nkx00e4 associationsofdeliberateselfharmwithlonelinessselfratedhealthandlifesatisfactioninadolescencenorthernfinlandbirthcohort1986study
AT anjataanila associationsofdeliberateselfharmwithlonelinessselfratedhealthandlifesatisfactioninadolescencenorthernfinlandbirthcohort1986study
AT markkukoiranen associationsofdeliberateselfharmwithlonelinessselfratedhealthandlifesatisfactioninadolescencenorthernfinlandbirthcohort1986study
AT vappusunnari associationsofdeliberateselfharmwithlonelinessselfratedhealthandlifesatisfactioninadolescencenorthernfinlandbirthcohort1986study
AT arjarautio associationsofdeliberateselfharmwithlonelinessselfratedhealthandlifesatisfactioninadolescencenorthernfinlandbirthcohort1986study
_version_ 1724977289519693824