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Veronica Heney headshot

Dr Veronica Heney from our Institute for Medical Humanities and Department of Sociology has been awarded a Wellcome Early Career Award to re-configure understandings of self-harm.

Self-harm is a common experience. Around 6.4% of the UK population report having self-harmed in their lifetime, with rates rising. 

Current medical practices and public health policies like the 2023 Online Safety Act, which prohibits content encouraging self-harm, prioritise prevention.  

Dr Heney’s 5-year project will move beyond quantitative, risk-centric approaches and instead centre lived experience and creative methods to improve understandings.  

It responds to existing failures of care, seeking more nuanced and supportive responses to self-harm across community action, healthcare practice, and policy. 

Transforming how we know self-harm

Dr Heney’s project challenges assumptions about how self-harm is located in and influenced by culture.  

One strand will draw on lived experience perspectives to re-examine the evidence for ‘the narrative of social contagion’ – the idea that exposure to self-harm via peers, groups or media increases the likelihood that someone will adopt or imitate those behaviours. 

The project will also work with people who self-harm to co-create visual art, exploring collage as a mode of engagement with experience, and draw on insights from fiction to co-develop a new, collective vision for self-harm care.  

Leaders in engaged research

This prestigious award further consolidates Durham as a world-leader in participatory methods and in interdisciplinary and cross-sector health research that centres lived experience. 

Many people who seek medical support for self-harm report poor treatment, including discriminatory attitudes and a lack of empathy. By putting experiential knowledge and co-creation at the heart of research, this award provides an exciting opportunity to build long-term, meaningful collaborations with communities and third sector organisations that will change how self-harm is researched, cared-for and understood.

Dr Veronica Heney
Institute for Medical Humanities
Our Department of Sociology is renowned for its excellence in collaborative and community-led research on health and social justice. We’re delighted to see the launch of Dr Heney’s innovative project, which will extend and build upon this work.

Professor Geetanjali Gangoli
Head of Department of Sociology

'Re-knowing Self-harm' runs until March 2031, hosted by our Institute for Medical Humanities and Department of Sociology. 

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