"我无法逃避我的伤疤,即使我真的好起来了":对青少年在抑郁症认知行为治疗过程中如何谈论自残和自残伤疤的定性探索。

Anna Kristen, Tanya Lecchi, Maria E Loades, Nick Midgley
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引用次数: 0

摘要

新的证据表明,对自残行为和自残伤疤的看法可能会阻碍抑郁症患者的康复,但对青少年在治疗过程中描述自残行为和伤疤的研究却很有限。本研究试图探讨青少年在认知行为疗法(CBT)过程中如何描述他们的自残行为和伤疤,并探索可能影响这些描述的社会文化论述。研究对象是六名患有临床抑郁症并有自残行为的女性青少年(14-17 岁)。所有参与者都接受了 CBT 治疗,这是评估儿童和青少年心理健康服务机构针对重度抑郁障碍的三种心理治疗方法的临床试验的一部分。我们采用语篇分析法对 CBT 课程录音进行了分析。在 CBT 课程中,青少年在谈论他们的自我伤害时借鉴了污名化话语。青少年还将他们的自残伤疤描述为可耻和耻辱,并将其描述为其抑郁症合理性的 "证据"。对于 CBT 实践者来说,了解围绕自残行为和自残伤疤的社会文化论述的背景非常重要,这些论述反映在患有抑郁症的青少年在治疗过程中如何描述这些行为和伤疤,并可能会使他们的痛苦持续下去。研究表明,对语言使用和相互交织的社会文化论述的认识可以为 CBT 实践提供参考。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
"I can't escape my scars, even if I do get better": A qualitative exploration of how adolescents talk about their self-harm and self-harm scars during cognitive behavioural therapy for depression.

Emerging evidence indicates that perceptions of self-harm behaviours and self-harm scars may thwart recovery from depression, yet limited research has explored adolescent accounts of their self-harm and scars during therapy. This study sought to explore how adolescents describe their self-harm behaviours and scars during Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) and explore the sociocultural discourses that may influence these descriptions. The participants were six female adolescents (aged 14-17 years old) with clinical depression, who were engaging in self-harm. All participants accessed CBT as part of clinical trial evaluating three psychological treatments for major depressive disorder in Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services. Audio-taped CBT sessions were analyzed using discourse analysis. Within CBT sessions, adolescents drew upon stigma discourses in talking about their self-harm. Adolescent also described their self-harm scars as shameful and stigmatizing, and as "proof" of the legitimacy of their depression. It is important for CBT practitioners to understand the context of sociocultural discourses around self-harm behaviours and self-harm scars, which are reflected in how adolescents with depression describe these within therapy and may serve to maintain distress. The study indicates that awareness of use of language and intersecting sociocultural discourses can inform CBT practice.

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