People who are prone to self-harm are five times more likely to commit violent crimes against others, a new study has found.
Researchers from Karolinska Institutet in Sweden studied about 1,850,525 individuals in total and followed them from age 15.
During the study period about 55,185 received self-harm associated clinical care, 66,561 were convicted of a violent crime, and about 8,155 were both exposed to self-harm and convicted of a violent crime.
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Almost as many men as women received clinical care for self-harm during the study period
The risk of violent crime conviction was particularly high for self-harming women with comorbid substance abuse, with a seven times increased risk for violent crime conviction, compared to women who had never received clinical care for self-harm, researchers said.
Even after controlling for relevant confounders, such as psychiatric co-morbidity and socioeconomic factors, self-harm was still associated with a doubled risk of violent crime conviction, a finding that remained when men and women were analysed separately.
"A susceptibility to self-harm seems to increase the risk of violent expression, but we found no support for the hypothesis that self-harm causes violence crime," said Hanna Sahlin of Karolinska Institutet.
"When we reversed the analysis and examined the risk of self-harm in individuals convicted of a violent crime, we found a similar association," Sahlin said.
"Taken together, this suggests that self-harm behaviour and violent criminality is a manifestation of a common underlying vulnerability," she said.
"We need to ask about aggressive behaviour towards others when we assess and treat self-harming individuals, but we also need to ask about self-harm when we assess and treat aggressive individuals," Sahlin said.
The study was published in the journal JAMA Psychiatry.
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