As part of a collaboration between the University of Guelph and McGill University, we are a non-profit outreach initiative providing information and resources about self-injury to those who self-injure, those who have recovered, and those who want to help.

Family, Partners and Friends

Are you a parent who has recently found out about your teen’s self-injury? Or, are you a teenager whose parent has recently found out about your self-injury? If so, then you might be eligible to participate in a study that uses a virtual interview and online surveys to understand how families navigate the discovery of self-injury.

The Risky Behaviour Lab’s Self-Injury and Family Functioning Project aims to understand how teens and parents cope with the discovery of self-injury. Interested parents and teens will complete a short, online eligibility survey. If eligible, parents and teens will complete separate interviews (on Zoom) with a trained member of our team. Then, parents and teens will complete online surveys every two weeks for 12 weeks.

Our interviews and surveys will ask about self-injury, mental health, family functioning, and wellbeing. Teens must be 13-17 years old, live part- or full-time with the parent partaking in the study, and have engaged in recent self-injury. Parents also need to have learned of their teen’s self-injury in the past six weeks.

Teens can receive up to $160 and parents can receive up to $140 if they complete all parts of the study. The total time required is about 6-7 hours, over 14 weeks.

This research is being conducted by Dr. Brianna Turner and Christina Robillard at the University of Victoria.

 To find out more information, visit the following website: https://onlineacademiccommunity.uvic.ca/teenselfinjurystudy/

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