What young people say about impulsivity in the short-term build up to self-harm: A qualitative study using card-sort tasks.

Youth who self-harm report high levels of trait impulsivity and identify impulsive behaviour as a proximal factor directly preceding a self-harm act. Yet, impulsivity is a multidimensional construct and distinct impulsivity-related facets relate differentially to self-harm outcomes. Studies have yet...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Joanna Lockwood, Ellen Townsend, Heather Allen, David Daley, Kapil Sayal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0244319
id doaj-d05ef95d071648339605170f37244b8a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d05ef95d071648339605170f37244b8a2021-03-14T05:32:45ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-011512e024431910.1371/journal.pone.0244319What young people say about impulsivity in the short-term build up to self-harm: A qualitative study using card-sort tasks.Joanna LockwoodEllen TownsendHeather AllenDavid DaleyKapil SayalYouth who self-harm report high levels of trait impulsivity and identify impulsive behaviour as a proximal factor directly preceding a self-harm act. Yet, impulsivity is a multidimensional construct and distinct impulsivity-related facets relate differentially to self-harm outcomes. Studies have yet to examine if and how a multidimensional account of impulsivity is meaningful to individual experiences and understandings of self-harm in youth. We explored the salience and context of multidimensional impulsivity within narratives of self-harm, and specifically in relation to the short-term build-up to a self-harm episode. Fifteen community-based adolescents (aged 16-22 years) attending Further Education (FE) colleges in the UK took part in individual face-to-face sessions (involving exploratory card-sort tasks and semi-structured interviews) which explored factors relating to self-harm, impulsivity and the broader emotional, developmental and cognitive context. Session data were analysed thematically. Two overarching themes, and associated subthemes, were identified: 'How I respond to strong negative emotions'; and 'Impulse versus deliberation- How much I think through what I'm doing before I do it'. Self-harm was typically a quick, impulsive act in the context of overwhelming emotion, underpinned by cognitive processing deficits. The dynamic tension between emotion-based impulsivity and controlled deliberation was articulated in the immediate moments before self-harm. However, impulsive responses were perceived as modifiable. Where self-harm patterns were established, these related to habitual behaviour and quick go-to responses. Young people identified with a multidimensional conception of impulsivity and described the impulsive context of a self-harm act as dynamic, contextual, and developmentally charged. Findings have implications for youth-focused work. Card-task frameworks are recommended to scaffold and facilitate discussion with young people, particularly where topics are sensitive, complex and multifactorial.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0244319
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joanna Lockwood
Ellen Townsend
Heather Allen
David Daley
Kapil Sayal
spellingShingle Joanna Lockwood
Ellen Townsend
Heather Allen
David Daley
Kapil Sayal
What young people say about impulsivity in the short-term build up to self-harm: A qualitative study using card-sort tasks.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Joanna Lockwood
Ellen Townsend
Heather Allen
David Daley
Kapil Sayal
author_sort Joanna Lockwood
title What young people say about impulsivity in the short-term build up to self-harm: A qualitative study using card-sort tasks.
title_short What young people say about impulsivity in the short-term build up to self-harm: A qualitative study using card-sort tasks.
title_full What young people say about impulsivity in the short-term build up to self-harm: A qualitative study using card-sort tasks.
title_fullStr What young people say about impulsivity in the short-term build up to self-harm: A qualitative study using card-sort tasks.
title_full_unstemmed What young people say about impulsivity in the short-term build up to self-harm: A qualitative study using card-sort tasks.
title_sort what young people say about impulsivity in the short-term build up to self-harm: a qualitative study using card-sort tasks.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Youth who self-harm report high levels of trait impulsivity and identify impulsive behaviour as a proximal factor directly preceding a self-harm act. Yet, impulsivity is a multidimensional construct and distinct impulsivity-related facets relate differentially to self-harm outcomes. Studies have yet to examine if and how a multidimensional account of impulsivity is meaningful to individual experiences and understandings of self-harm in youth. We explored the salience and context of multidimensional impulsivity within narratives of self-harm, and specifically in relation to the short-term build-up to a self-harm episode. Fifteen community-based adolescents (aged 16-22 years) attending Further Education (FE) colleges in the UK took part in individual face-to-face sessions (involving exploratory card-sort tasks and semi-structured interviews) which explored factors relating to self-harm, impulsivity and the broader emotional, developmental and cognitive context. Session data were analysed thematically. Two overarching themes, and associated subthemes, were identified: 'How I respond to strong negative emotions'; and 'Impulse versus deliberation- How much I think through what I'm doing before I do it'. Self-harm was typically a quick, impulsive act in the context of overwhelming emotion, underpinned by cognitive processing deficits. The dynamic tension between emotion-based impulsivity and controlled deliberation was articulated in the immediate moments before self-harm. However, impulsive responses were perceived as modifiable. Where self-harm patterns were established, these related to habitual behaviour and quick go-to responses. Young people identified with a multidimensional conception of impulsivity and described the impulsive context of a self-harm act as dynamic, contextual, and developmentally charged. Findings have implications for youth-focused work. Card-task frameworks are recommended to scaffold and facilitate discussion with young people, particularly where topics are sensitive, complex and multifactorial.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0244319
work_keys_str_mv AT joannalockwood whatyoungpeoplesayaboutimpulsivityintheshorttermbuilduptoselfharmaqualitativestudyusingcardsorttasks
AT ellentownsend whatyoungpeoplesayaboutimpulsivityintheshorttermbuilduptoselfharmaqualitativestudyusingcardsorttasks
AT heatherallen whatyoungpeoplesayaboutimpulsivityintheshorttermbuilduptoselfharmaqualitativestudyusingcardsorttasks
AT daviddaley whatyoungpeoplesayaboutimpulsivityintheshorttermbuilduptoselfharmaqualitativestudyusingcardsorttasks
AT kapilsayal whatyoungpeoplesayaboutimpulsivityintheshorttermbuilduptoselfharmaqualitativestudyusingcardsorttasks
_version_ 1714785874379538432