The role of emotional responding and childhood maltreatment in the development and maintenance of deliberate self-harm among male undergraduates

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Abstract

Despite recent findings indicating comparable rates of deliberate self-harm across gender (Gratz, Conrad, & Roemer, 2002; Klonsky, Oltmanns, & Turkheimer, 2003; Muehlenkamp & Gutierrez, 2004; Zoroglu et al., 2003), little research has examined the pathogenesis of self-harm among men. Thus, the present study sought to extend extant research by examining the environmental (i.e., aspects of childhood maltreatment) and individual (i.e., emotional inexpressivity, affect intensity/reactivity, and emotion dysregulation) risk factors associated with the development and maintenance of deliberate self-harm among male undergraduates (N = 97). Results indicated that childhood physical abuse and emotion dysregulation distinguished men with frequent self-harm from men without a history of self-harm. Among men with a history of self-harm, emotion dysregulation was associated with more frequent self-harm. However, contrary to predictions, higher affect intensity/reactivity was associated with less frequent self-harm. © 2007 APA, all rights reserved.

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Gratz, K. L., & Chapman, A. L. (2007). The role of emotional responding and childhood maltreatment in the development and maintenance of deliberate self-harm among male undergraduates. Psychology of Men and Masculinity, 8(1), 1–14. https://doi.org/10.1037/1524-9220.8.1.1

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