Adolescents at risk of self-harm in Ghana: A qualitative interview study exploring the views and experiences of key adult informants

Emmanuel N.B. Quarshie, Mitch G. Waterman, Allan O. House

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

5 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: In Ghana, rates of self-harm in young people are as high as they are in high income countries. Self-reported interpersonal, familial and societal stressors form the most important background, and self-harm is seen by young people as a way of responding to that stress. In the present study, we obtained the views of key adult informants about self-harm among adolescents in Ghana - what they thought as possible reasons for self-harm in young people and what actions might be needed at an individual or population level to respond to the problem. Methods: We interviewed face-to-face 11 adults, using a semi-structured interview guide. We used an experiential thematic analysis technique to analyse the transcribed interviews. Results: The analysis identified five themes: "underestimating the prevalence of self-harm in adolescents", "life on the streets makes self-harm less likely", "self-harm in adolescents is socially and psychologically understandable", "ambivalence about responding to adolescent self-harm", and "few immediate opportunities for self-harm prevention in Ghana". Adolescent self-harm was acknowledged but its scale was underestimated. The participants offered explanations for adolescent self-harm in social and psychological terms that are recognisable from accounts in high income countries. Low rates among street-connected young people were explained by their overarching orientation for survival. Participants agreed that identification was important, but they expressed a sense of inadequacy in identifying and supporting adolescents at risk of self-harm. Again, the participants agreed that self-harm in adolescents should be prevented, but they recognised that relevant policies were not in place or if there were policies they were not implemented - mental health and self-harm were not high on public or political priorities. Conclusions: The adults we interviewed about young people who self-harm see themselves as having a role in identifying adolescents at risk of self-harm and see the organisations in which they work as having a role in responding to individual young people in need. These are encouraging findings that point to at least one strand of a policy in Ghana for addressing the problem of self-harm in young people.

Original languageEnglish
Article number310
JournalBMC Psychiatry
Volume20
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 16 Jun 2020

Keywords

  • Adolescents
  • Ghana
  • Resilience
  • Rhetorical distancing
  • Self-harm
  • Social workers
  • Street-connected adolescents
  • Sub-Saharan Africa
  • Suicide
  • Teachers

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