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- I've discovered that my daughter is self-harming. Why is she doing this?
- I suspect my daughter is self-harming, but she doesn't want to talk about it. How can we help?
- How should parents react to this behavior? Should we check our children every day to see if they have self-harmed?
- What can we tell our children to change this behavior?
- My friend told me she's self-harming and I don't know what to do. Should I tell her parents?
- Are self-harms the same in boys and girls?
- Is trichotillomania a form of self-harm?
- How can we prevent them from self-harming again? What symptoms or tools can we give them so they can recognize when they are about to self-harm and stop?
- If we detect self-harm in our children, where should we go to see a psychologist through the public healthcare system?
- What can I do if my daughter relapses repeatedly despite going to therapy?
- Could it be considered self-harm when an 11-year-old child induces vomiting to avoid going to school?
- How can self-harm be detected if it's in a hidden location? On what parts of the body does it occur?
- Does self-harm mean you have borderline personality disorder or some other mental disorder?
- Why does self-harm seem to be fashionable these days? What's the reason for it?
- Is it possible my daughter copied this behavior from social media? How important is this, and what can we do?
- My daughter is in her first year of secondary school and is surrounded by other girls who self-harm. She thinks that if she doesn't, they won't accept her into the group. We talk about it at home, but how can I protect her from this behavior?
- Is self-harm a way to manipulate? Is it to get attention?
- How can we help a teenager who self-harms?
- Does self-harm in a teenager mean they have suicidal thoughts?
- If she self-harms now as a teenager, does that mean she'll do it for the rest of her life?
- If we detect that a student has self-harmed, what should we do?
- How can we manage cases of self-harm in school when we observe a contagious effect? When we ask them, they say they don't know why they do it, that since others do it, it's normal.
If we detect that a student has self-harmed, what should we do?
It is recommended that every school have a protocol for responding to cases of self-harm. This protocol should include guidelines on how to identify these cases, who should assess the student who has self-harmed and how, how and when to contact the parents, and how to prevent the spread of self-harm among other students.
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