Site news

Zip of text files updated

The file site80401.zip has a text copy of each page on this site. Each file contains the text of one of thepages and includes a table of links so you can see where the links would send you. I'll be updating this file weekly as needed.

Site search added

You can now perform a keyword search on all pages on this site. The search is powered by atomz.com, a very useful site.

Site update begins

You probably noticed the new look of this site. Over the rest of the summer I'll be updating each page and applying the new site design to it. Feedback is always welcome.

Living with SI page update

The living with self-injury page has been rewritten and a great deal of new information has been added.

National SI Awareness Day -- March 1, 2002

National Self-Injury Awareness Day will be March 1, 2002. On this day, people across the United States whose lives have been changed in some way by the psychological phenomenon of self-injury (also known as deliberate self-harm or self-inflicted violence) will be providing educational information to doctors, hospital decision- makers, therapists, school counselors, and other medical and mental health professionals in an effort to raise awareness of self-injury and debunk some of the myths surrounding it.

You can have the basic fact sheet emailed to you. An accompanying brochure, press release, and list of suggestions for distribution are being prepared. A general information sheet for participants will have suggestions about who to target in your area; who to contact about getting permission to speak in schools; where to send press releases; ways to get the information out and stay anonymous; etc.

If you'd like to participate, please send email with your name, city, nearest large city, and activities you're interested in.

Old news

Washington D.C. -- SAMHSA held a meeting to plan a national agenda about SI

I was flown out for the meeting, held at the end of March.

It was a cool meeting. There were about 30 people the first day and 20 the second. We had a couple of lawyers, a woman who's been involved with the Boston women's health book collective for decades [and for whom I am currently critiquing a chapter of her new book on self-harm], a philosopher, a prison sociologist, a few psychiatrists and psychologists, some mental health program people, a few consumers, the woman who publishes "The Cutting Edge," and me.

The goal was to produce a "vision statement" and specific recommendations for the Center for Mental Health about how to implement it. Dusty Miller was there, Esther Giller from Sidran was there, and as I said, Ruta Mazelis of The Cutting Edge was there. Favazza was there but left partway into the first day.

One of the things that was interesting was the people who had not been directly involved with this before talking about how they felt weird even reading a book about self-injury on the plane or telling people who asked what conference it was they were going to, and how people just shut down when they mentioned it. The stigma is incredible.

Some important things that I think were established:

There was more, and I don't know how much of this will make it into the monograph they're preparing, but I'm still really glad I went.

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