Correlates of Deliberate Self-Harm in Youth With Autism and/or Intellectual Disability

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

9-1-2025

Publication Title

JAACAP Open

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To identify correlates of deliberate self-harm (DSH) in youth with autism and/or intellectual disability (ID).

METHOD: This retrospective longitudinal cohort analysis used claims data for youth ages 5 to 24 years continuously enrolled in Medicaid in a midwestern state for 6 months and diagnosed with autism and/or ID between 2010 and 2020 (N = 41,230). Cox proportional hazards regression examined associations between demographic and clinical variables and time to DSH for study cohorts with autism and/or ID.

RESULTS: Autism was diagnosed in 34.3% of the sample, ID was diagnosed in 30.6%, and both autism and ID were diagnosed in 35.1%. Sample youth were predominantly male (73.4%) and had an internalizing (74.8%) or externalizing (62.1%) mental health condition. At least 1 DSH event was identified for 734 youths (2.6%) with autism and 686 youths (2.7%) with ID during follow-up. Increased risk of DSH was associated with older age; female sex; history of abuse or neglect; and co-occurring externalizing problems, internalizing problems, substance use, and thought problems for the autism cohort and ID cohort and with the presence of a chronic complex medical condition in the autism cohort. Risk of DSH was significantly lower for youth with moderate ID and youth eligible for Medicaid via disability and foster care.

CONCLUSION: Risk factors for DSH in youth with autism and ID are similar to those in neurotypical youth and include increasing age, trauma, mental health conditions, substance use, and female sex. Clinician and consumer education regarding suicide risk and its correlates in youth with autism and ID warrants study.

PubMed ID

40922768

Volume

3

Issue

3

First Page

477

Last Page

484

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