Please note that the William James INTERFACE Referral Service will be operating on a limited schedule to allow our staff to enjoy the holidays. The INTERFACE Referral Service will be open with limited staffing on Monday, 12/23/24, Friday, 12/27/24, and on Monday, 12/30/24. All calls will be returned during these times.

The INTERFACE Referral Service will re-open for our typical hours on Thursday, January 2nd, 2025. We wish everyone a wonderful holiday season and a Happy New Year!

We at the William James College INTERFACE Referral Service are keenly aware of the shortage of mental health providers of color and how racial inequities exist in medical and mental health care. The College’s Black Mental Health Academy, Center for Multicultural and Global Mental Health, and other programs and academic offerings are playing a critical role in reversing this trend. We invite you to read a statement from our Black Mental Health Graduate Academy Scholars, and to stand with us as allies to drive change and address systemic racism.

Self Injury

Self Injury

Nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI)

NSSI is the deliberate act of harming oneself without suicidal intent. Some of the most common self-injurious behaviors include cutting, scratching, and/or burning one’s skin. NSSI could also involve intentionally injuring one’s own body by other means with the intent to inflict pain (e.g. head banging, skin picking and/or substance use to the point of harming oneself such as via overdose).  Individuals who engage in NSSI can harm themselves anywhere on their bodies. Yet, some of the most common places where individuals engage in NSSI are on the hands, wrists, stomach, and thighs.

Although NSSI may appear like a suicidal gesture, self-injury is often an individual’s effort to cope with overwhelming negative emotions, such as intense anger, sadness, anxiety, and frustration. Engaging in self-injury is not the same as feeling suicidal, but individuals who engage in NSSI can become suicidal. In fact, individuals who self-injure are at greater risk for attempting suicide.  Self-injury can result in a temporary release of tension and sometimes a feeling of euphoria, which may be later followed by feelings of guilt, shame and other painful emotions. 

Individuals from all genders, nationalities, socioeconomic groups, and ages can engage in self-injurious behavior. The highest proportion of individuals who, at some point in their life, have engaged in self-injurious behaviors are teenagers, with a 17 percent lifetime prevalence rate of NSSI. Meaning 17% of teenagers have engaged in some sort of NSSI at some point in their lives.  

Treatment of self-injury may include a combination of psychotherapy and medications such as mood stabilizers and/or anti-anxiety medications (anxiolytics).  Therapeutic support and medication may help individuals to better manage overwhelming negative emotions that contribute to self-injurious behaviors.  After the individual is stabilized, therapeutic work through various form of therapy (e.g. individual therapy, group therapy, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)) can help coping with the underlying problems that are causing distress.  In addition to these methods of treatment, it is important that the individual struggling with self-injury be taught alternative methods to replace the self-injurious behaviors with more effective and safe coping skills.  A central component to treatment is the individual’s desire to participate in and willingness to make changes.

Additional resources available at:

https://www.crisistextline.org/spread-the-word/

https://www.thetrevorproject.org/trvr_support_center/self-injury/