0 present participle of self-harm
1 to deliberately hurt yourself, for example by cutting yourself, because you have emotional problems or are mentally ill
In contrast, 5 years after having received psychotherapeutic intervention, there would only be a 6 % likelihood that the patient would still be self-harming.
Cognitive and personality factors also distinguish parasuicidal adolescents from those do not engage in self-harming behaviors.
The latent classes differed on gender ratio, fertility, age of onset and self-harming behaviour, but not on substance misuse or season of birth.
However, it remains a possibility that more intense emotional stimuli are associated with a longer recovery among self-harming samples.
Finally, it is possible that subjective experiences of emotion among self-harming samples diverge from autonomic response patterns.
It is natural to suppose that the problem with hard antipaternalism is that it protects individuals' freedom to perform actions that are gratuitously or viciously self-harming.
Feinberg could deny on conceptual grounds that there is coherent sense to be made of self-wronging, as opposed to mere self-harming.
There were 17 reported incidents of deliberate self-harming among 15 and 16-year-olds during the same period.