Experiences and Perceptions of Self-Harm in Rural-Dwelling Adults: A Rapid Review of Qualitative Evidence

IF 3 3区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Katie Saunders, William Nicholls, Nadia Corp, Tom Kingstone, Faraz Mughal, Carolyn A. Chew-Graham, Jane Southam, Tamsin Fisher
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Self-harm is associated with factors that are relevant to and exacerbated by rurality. Living in rural areas may intensify existing socio-economic disadvantages linked to service access, employment opportunities, transport conditions and risks from hazardous environments. Geographical isolation and fragmented social networks, particularly those related to family, are also common among rural residents. Rurality is therefore likely to shape experiences of mental health problems, including self-harm. However, this literature has not been synthesised.

Aim

To synthesise current qualitative evidence on the experiences and perceptions of self-harm among rural-dwelling adults and care providers' perspectives and to identify knowledge gaps.

Approach

Rapid review of qualitative evidence identified via relevant electronic literature databases. Thematic synthesis was used to compare findings on perceptions and experiences of self-harm in rural areas. Confidence in synthesis findings was assessed using GRADE-CERQual.

Findings

Searches identified 1673 unique references, of which 14 were included in the final synthesis. Two themes were generated with high to moderate confidence: ‘experiences of rural self-harm’ with two subthemes ‘reasons for self-harm’ and ‘perceptions of self-harm’, and ‘access to healthcare’ with two subthemes: ‘healthcare practitioners' perceptions of rural self-harm’ and ‘lack of support and resources’. Various reasons and motivations for self-harm were identified; stigma was commonly reported. Services for rural residents who self-harmed were difficult to access. Healthcare practitioners in these areas may lack adequate training, which may maintain stigmatised views.

Conclusion

The review identified shared experiences and motivations for self-harm across different rural contexts globally. Perceptions of self-harm by people with lived experience, family and healthcare professionals reflected stigmatised views, which impacted access to and provision of care. Experiences and perceptions of self-harm reported in the literature are somewhat overshadowed by data on suicide and suicide behaviours. Methodological implications are noted in terms of the complexity of extracting data about self-harm. Future research would help inform intervention development for people who are at risk of self-harm, to support healthcare practitioners to improve awareness and identify best practices to support those who self-harm.

Patient or Public Contribution

Patient and public involvement was integrated at various points throughout the study, including reviewing themes, supporting the writing up of findings and a review draft and final manuscripts.

Abstract Image

农村成年人的自我伤害经历和看法:定性证据快速审查
背景自残与乡村性相关并因乡村性而加剧的因素相关。生活在农村地区可能会加剧与获得服务、就业机会、交通条件和危险环境风险有关的现有社会经济劣势。在农村居民中,地理隔离和支离破碎的社会网络,特别是与家庭有关的社会网络也很普遍。因此,乡村生活可能会影响心理健康问题的经历,包括自残。然而,这些文献并没有被综合。目的综合目前关于农村成年人自残经历和认知的定性证据以及护理提供者的观点,并确定知识差距。方法通过相关电子文献数据库快速审查定性证据。主题综合用于比较农村地区关于自我伤害的认知和经历的调查结果。使用GRADE-CERQual评估合成结果的置信度。检索发现了1673个独特的参考文献,其中14个被纳入最终的综合。产生了两个高至中等自信的主题:“农村自残经历”和两个子主题“自残原因”和“自残感知”,以及“获得医疗保健”和两个子主题:“医疗从业人员对农村自残的感知”和“缺乏支持和资源”。确定了自残的各种原因和动机;柱头通常被报道。农村居民自残服务难以获得。这些地区的医疗保健从业人员可能缺乏足够的培训,这可能会保持污名化的观点。结论:该综述确定了全球不同农村背景下自残的共同经历和动机。有生活经验的人、家庭和保健专业人员对自残的看法反映了污名化的观点,这影响了获得和提供护理。文献中报道的自我伤害的经历和感知在某种程度上被自杀和自杀行为的数据所掩盖。在提取有关自残的数据的复杂性方面,注意到方法上的影响。未来的研究将有助于为有自残风险的人提供干预措施,支持医疗从业人员提高认识并确定支持自残者的最佳做法。在整个研究过程中,患者和公众的参与在各个方面都得到了整合,包括审查主题、支持研究结果的撰写、审查草稿和最终手稿。
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来源期刊
Health Expectations
Health Expectations 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
9.40%
发文量
251
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Health Expectations promotes critical thinking and informed debate about all aspects of patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) in health and social care, health policy and health services research including: • Person-centred care and quality improvement • Patients'' participation in decisions about disease prevention and management • Public perceptions of health services • Citizen involvement in health care policy making and priority-setting • Methods for monitoring and evaluating participation • Empowerment and consumerism • Patients'' role in safety and quality • Patient and public role in health services research • Co-production (researchers working with patients and the public) of research, health care and policy Health Expectations is a quarterly, peer-reviewed journal publishing original research, review articles and critical commentaries. It includes papers which clarify concepts, develop theories, and critically analyse and evaluate specific policies and practices. The Journal provides an inter-disciplinary and international forum in which researchers (including PPIE researchers) from a range of backgrounds and expertise can present their work to other researchers, policy-makers, health care professionals, managers, patients and consumer advocates.
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