This is your Member Reference Number (MRN). You’ll need to provide this when you make an appointment with an EAP counselor or contact your EAP by phone.

Anthem provides automatic translation into multiple languages, courtesy of Google Translate. This tool is provided for your convenience only. The English language version is considered the most accurate, and in the event of a discrepancy between the translations, the English version will prevail. This translation tool is not controlled by Anthem, and the Anthem Privacy Statement will not apply. Please read Google's privacy statement. If you want Google to translate the Anthem website, select a language.

Benefits with Marathon Petroleum Company

Your EAP offers these great resources.

Self-Harm

What is it?

For some people, being unable to cope can lead to self-destructive behaviors such as excessive use of alcohol, nicotine, and drugs. Less is spoken openly on the practice of self-injury, which involves cutting, burning, scratching, and the pulling out of hair to express torment and pain.

It can be described as the expression of an inner scream and is a coping method used to handle feelings. It turns internal pain to the outside and gives it a focus making it easier for the sufferer to handle. A desire to relieve tension by drawing blood is often described. Deliberate self-harm is commonly due to depressed mood and tends to occur in individuals who have difficulty verbalizing emotions.

Recent research revealed that almost two thirds of women with a history of self-injury attributed it to childhood experiences. Histories such as vulnerability to loss, the role of a victim, a distorted body image, and a tendency to self-destructive behavior may establish behaviors making an individual prone to self-harm.

Effective Response

It is important the person does not feel blame and has someone supportive to talk to, such as a family member, friend, or health care professional. Being uncritical can make the person feel accepted and cared for. Treatment of someone who has self-harmed depends on the underlying cause. If related to psychiatric illness or psychological disorder, a referral to a professional is necessary. Talking it through with a professional can impact the individual's thinking processes and work to help the person develop strategies to cope.

Distraction may be helpful when the person feels the urge to self-harm. Listening to music, going for a walk, calling a help line, or expressing what one is going through to someone supportive can all be of benefit. Safety is of priority as although the person may not intend to kill themselves, this may happen by accident. Alternative strategies such as punching cushions or squeezing a rubber ball in the palm of the hand can reduce the tension which contributes to the destructive behavior.


Workplace Options. (Reviewed 2018). Self-harm. Raleigh, NC: Author.

More about this Topics

  • Secondary Trauma: When You're Affected by Another Person's Traumatic Experience

  • Suicide Prevention (Part 2)

  • Cutting and Self-Harm

  • Keeping Holiday Stress at Bay

  • Managing Stress as a College Student

Other Topics

    • Caring for a loved one with autism
    • Optimism and Recuperation
    • Managing holiday stress
    • Exercise and Depression
    • Deflate the Pressure
    • Maintaining Composure During COVID-19
    • The Mental Health Benefits of Staying Organized
    • Coping with the Stress of Emergency Relocation
    • Tips for Talking to Children and Youth After Traumatic Events
    • The Preventable Death
    • Information Overload
    • Effective Communication During a Crisis
    • Better Relations between Men and Women (International Men's Day)
    • Creating Hope Through Action (World Suicide Prevention Day)
    • Being an Upstander