An existential-phenomenological investigation of self-cutting among adolescent girls

The present study examined the experience of self-cutting, what stops adolescent girls from engaging in self-cutting, and what message adolescent girls who are self-cutting would want to send to other girls taking part in this behavior. Using an existential-phenomenological method of interviewing, a...

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Main Author: Privé, Amanda A
Format: Others
Published: Scholar Commons 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/2329
http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3328&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-33282015-09-30T04:39:13Z An existential-phenomenological investigation of self-cutting among adolescent girls Privé, Amanda A The present study examined the experience of self-cutting, what stops adolescent girls from engaging in self-cutting, and what message adolescent girls who are self-cutting would want to send to other girls taking part in this behavior. Using an existential-phenomenological method of interviewing, adolescent girls were asked a serious of questions in order to gain insight into their thoughts, feelings, and beliefs about the experience of self-cutting. Each interview was tape recorded, transcribed, and thematized. The participants in this study were labeled co-researchers due to the significant role that they had in the completion of this study. The co-researchers consisted of six adolescent girls aged 15 to 18 years old. They all attended high schools within a large urban school district in Florida. Through a reduction of the data obtained during the interviews, five superordinate themes were discovered for the first research question, which examined the experience of self-cutting. The themes depicted the following experience. Before engaging in self-cutting, each co-researcher had "A Lot of Feelings" stemming from "A Big Event" that they needed to "Release." They chose cutting because "Nothing [else] Ever Worked" and the act of cutting made them "Numb" and feel "No Pain." Themes developed from the second research question, which examined what stops adolescent girls from self-cutting, included "Thinking About the People Who Care" or when "Thinking About the Consequences" of cutting. If they could send a message to other girls who are cutting, the co-researchers in this study would say "Don't Do It." The co-researchers were able to articulate other coping strategies to serve the same function as cutting but sometimes refused to implement them. Results of this study support the findings of previous research. 2007-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/2329 http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3328&context=etd default Graduate Theses and Dissertations Scholar Commons Self-harm Self-mutilation Stress relief High school Qualitative interviews American Studies Arts and Humanities
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Self-harm
Self-mutilation
Stress relief
High school
Qualitative interviews
American Studies
Arts and Humanities
spellingShingle Self-harm
Self-mutilation
Stress relief
High school
Qualitative interviews
American Studies
Arts and Humanities
Privé, Amanda A
An existential-phenomenological investigation of self-cutting among adolescent girls
description The present study examined the experience of self-cutting, what stops adolescent girls from engaging in self-cutting, and what message adolescent girls who are self-cutting would want to send to other girls taking part in this behavior. Using an existential-phenomenological method of interviewing, adolescent girls were asked a serious of questions in order to gain insight into their thoughts, feelings, and beliefs about the experience of self-cutting. Each interview was tape recorded, transcribed, and thematized. The participants in this study were labeled co-researchers due to the significant role that they had in the completion of this study. The co-researchers consisted of six adolescent girls aged 15 to 18 years old. They all attended high schools within a large urban school district in Florida. Through a reduction of the data obtained during the interviews, five superordinate themes were discovered for the first research question, which examined the experience of self-cutting. The themes depicted the following experience. Before engaging in self-cutting, each co-researcher had "A Lot of Feelings" stemming from "A Big Event" that they needed to "Release." They chose cutting because "Nothing [else] Ever Worked" and the act of cutting made them "Numb" and feel "No Pain." Themes developed from the second research question, which examined what stops adolescent girls from self-cutting, included "Thinking About the People Who Care" or when "Thinking About the Consequences" of cutting. If they could send a message to other girls who are cutting, the co-researchers in this study would say "Don't Do It." The co-researchers were able to articulate other coping strategies to serve the same function as cutting but sometimes refused to implement them. Results of this study support the findings of previous research.
author Privé, Amanda A
author_facet Privé, Amanda A
author_sort Privé, Amanda A
title An existential-phenomenological investigation of self-cutting among adolescent girls
title_short An existential-phenomenological investigation of self-cutting among adolescent girls
title_full An existential-phenomenological investigation of self-cutting among adolescent girls
title_fullStr An existential-phenomenological investigation of self-cutting among adolescent girls
title_full_unstemmed An existential-phenomenological investigation of self-cutting among adolescent girls
title_sort existential-phenomenological investigation of self-cutting among adolescent girls
publisher Scholar Commons
publishDate 2007
url http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/2329
http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3328&context=etd
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