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Self-mutilation: culture, contexts and nursing responses.

82

Citations

26

References

1998

Year

Abstract

Few papers address the issue of deliberate self-mutilation other than from clinical perspectives. This paper advocates a user-perspective and discusses some of the issues which might attend such a change. The occurrence of self-mutilation is placed within a cultural framework so as to enlarge the debate beyond the confines of medical/nursing responses. It is suggested that nurses abrogate their attachment to such responses and embrace more collaborative approaches to care. In particular, nurses are asked to review their (moral) responses to self-mutilation, an activity which, too often, has been responded to with scorn and derision.

References

YearCitations

1961

37.8K

1983

560

1974

373

1969

260

1988

237

1972

226

1984

224

1967

188

1975

114

1975

112

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