Analysis of Reddit forum suggests experience of non-suicidal self-harm shares characteristics with addiction

A large majority of individuals who reported and discussed non-suicidal self-injury on the social media platform Reddit described their experience in terms similar to those used to diagnose substance use disorder, according to researchers at the National Institutes of Health, who analyzed more than 350,000 posts and comments. People who posted from 2010 to 2019 on a forum dedicated to discussion of self-harm, called r/selfharm, often directly referred to their self-injuring activities as an "addiction," citing cravings and escalating severity or tolerance, and regularly used terms employed by people recovering from substance use disorders, such as getting "clean" or "relapsing." The study, published in Journal of Behavioral Addictions, was conducted by scientists at the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), part of NIH.
A large majority of individuals who reported and discussed non-suicidal self-injury on the social media platform Reddit described their experience in terms similar to those used to diagnose substance use disorder, according to researchers at the National Institutes of Health, who analyzed more than 350,000 posts and comments. People who posted from 2010 to 2019 on a forum dedicated to discussion of self-harm, called r/selfharm, often directly referred to their self-injuring activities as an «addiction,» citing cravings and escalating severity or tolerance, and regularly used terms employed by people recovering from substance use disorders, such as getting «clean» or «relapsing.» The study, published in Journal of Behavioral Addictions, was conducted by scientists at the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), part of NIH.