Deliberate self-injury is a significant social problem affecting youth in New Zealand. Rates of hospitalisation for youth (aged 15 to 19) from deliberate self-injury approximate 225 per 100,000. It appears that the rates for Maori and women are significantly higher. From 1987 to 1993, an average of 488 Maori women per 100 000 population have been hospitalised each year (Ministry of Health: Manatu Hauora, 1996). This paper draws upon both local and international literature to examine factors underlying this ethnic disparity. There is a wealth of literature examining risk factors underlying suicidal behaviour as a whole. Deliberate self-injury is usually assumed to be an adjunct of youth suicide; prevention strategies are conflated. T...
This study explores ethnic differences in risk and protective factors for suicide attempts, for the ...
Objective: To undertake a systematic review of non‐suicidal self‐injury (NSSI) prevalence, patterns...
Purpose – Injuries are influenced by individual attitudes and risk-taking behaviours and the identif...
Deliberate self-injury is a significant social problem affecting youth in New Zealand. Rates of hosp...
Deliberate self-injury is a significant social problem affecting youth in New Zealand. Rates of hos...
There is an established international literature on the prevalence of non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI...
Abstract Background Studies suggest that the rates of...
Background: According to the World Health Organization, every year, roughly 800,000 people die due t...
This article describes patterns of suicide and attempted suicide among the indigenous (Ma ̄ori) popu...
This annual statistical publication presents suicide information received from the New Zealand Morta...
In New Zealand, a number of studies have documented that New Zealand Māori are at increased risk for...
This paper reviews literature on self-harm and suicide among Indigenous populations in four nations ...
Abstract Background Maori, the indigenous people of New Zealand, who present to hospital after inten...
Study objective-Relative risks are frequently used to convey how strongly outcomes like mental illne...
Suicide attempts have been of concern throughout the world especially in youths so that a study of t...
This study explores ethnic differences in risk and protective factors for suicide attempts, for the ...
Objective: To undertake a systematic review of non‐suicidal self‐injury (NSSI) prevalence, patterns...
Purpose – Injuries are influenced by individual attitudes and risk-taking behaviours and the identif...
Deliberate self-injury is a significant social problem affecting youth in New Zealand. Rates of hosp...
Deliberate self-injury is a significant social problem affecting youth in New Zealand. Rates of hos...
There is an established international literature on the prevalence of non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI...
Abstract Background Studies suggest that the rates of...
Background: According to the World Health Organization, every year, roughly 800,000 people die due t...
This article describes patterns of suicide and attempted suicide among the indigenous (Ma ̄ori) popu...
This annual statistical publication presents suicide information received from the New Zealand Morta...
In New Zealand, a number of studies have documented that New Zealand Māori are at increased risk for...
This paper reviews literature on self-harm and suicide among Indigenous populations in four nations ...
Abstract Background Maori, the indigenous people of New Zealand, who present to hospital after inten...
Study objective-Relative risks are frequently used to convey how strongly outcomes like mental illne...
Suicide attempts have been of concern throughout the world especially in youths so that a study of t...
This study explores ethnic differences in risk and protective factors for suicide attempts, for the ...
Objective: To undertake a systematic review of non‐suicidal self‐injury (NSSI) prevalence, patterns...
Purpose – Injuries are influenced by individual attitudes and risk-taking behaviours and the identif...