Cutting and severe scratching were among the most common forms of self-injury, the report found

The findings, published in March, were drawn from a national study conducted by Singapore’s Institute of Mental Health (IMH) involving 2,600 respondents. It categorised behaviours such as cutting, burning, hitting or other forms of deliberate self-harm as non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI).

The median age that such self-harm starts is 14, while males typically have a second peak at around age 18, according to the study.

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