Year: 2019 Source: Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry. (2019). Published online 22 August 2019. doi: 10.1016/j.jaac.2019.08.006 SIEC No: 20190841

Objective
Adolescent nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) is a significant risk factor for suicidal behavior and an important clinical marker of psychopathology. NSSI is especially common in adolescent girls. A number of psychosocial correlates of adolescent NSSI have been identified, including problems characterized by disinhibition and negative affectivity. However, it is unknown whether these characteristics prospectively predict first-onset NSSI, limiting our understanding of its etiology and prevention. The current study addresses this gap in the literature.
Method
Participants in the Adolescent Development of Emotion and Personality Traits (ADEPT) project at Stony Brook University who had not experienced NSSI at baseline (462 girls, mean age = 14.39 years, SD = 0.62 years) completed baseline measures of hypothesized risk factors related to problems with disinhibition and negative affectivity, including adolescent psychopathology, personality and clinical traits, and parental psychopathology. First onset of NSSI was monitored at 9-month intervals by in-person and telephone interviews over the next 36 months.
Results
There were 42 first onsets of NSSI (9.1%) in the 3 years since baseline. First-onset NSSI was independently predicted by adolescents’ low conscientiousness, high avoidance, and parental substance abuse at baseline. The composite risk index predicting first-onset NSSI demonstrated good accuracy for identifying girls who will start self-injuring (area under the curve = 0.78, sensitivity = 0.85, specificity = 0.57).
Conclusion
These results highlight the role of disinhibition and avoidance in the development of NSSI. The risk index predicting NSSI onset may help to guide the design and application of novel interventions to prevent this condition in adolescent girls.