Year: 2015 Source: Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Mental Health.(2015).Published online 8 July 2015.DOI:10.1186/s13034-015-0058-3 SIEC No: 20150485

Self-injury is a complex issue, further complicated by the fact that up to half of young people who self-injure do not receive help. Young people who do receive help for self-injury claim they prefer to access family and friends over more formal sources of help. This original research set out to examine the influence of negative attitudes to professional help and a sense of autonomy on help-seeking intentions. This study appears to be the first to set out to compare self-injurersÕ attitudes to help-seeking directly with those of non-self-injurers, and the first to show that attitudes mediate the relationship between autonomy and help-seeking. The findings provide evidence that will assist development of interventions targeting negative attitudes toward seeking professional help, in order to increase help-seeking among self-injurers who would otherwise not receive treatment.