Affiliation:
1. VA Western New York Healthcare System, Buffalo, NY, USA
Abstract
Self-injurious behaviors are common among clinical populations, and have been associated with mood disturbance, personality pathology, and trauma histories. Such behaviors often serve to displace emotional pain, produce physical or emotional sensations, or call for attention from others. Genital self-mutilation in particular is a statistically rare phenomenon that is typically associated with psychosis, extreme religious practices, or unsophisticated attempts at sexual reassignment. The present report describes a unique case of genital self-mutilation in a nonpsychotic individual with history of chronic depression, hypersexuality, and sexual masochism. Treatment consisted of a series of 10 individual therapy sessions that used cognitive-behavioral and dialectical-behavioral techniques to reduce the frequency and severity of self-injurious behaviors, to increase distress tolerance skills, and to implement and maintain a healthy pleasurable activity schedule.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology
Cited by
3 articles.
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