Self-harm, also known as self-injury, is defined as the intentional, direct injuring of body tissue done without the intent to commit suicide. Other terms such as cutting and self-mutilation have been used for any self-harming behavior regardless of suicidal intent. The most common form of self-harm is using a sharp object to cut one's skin. Other forms include behaviour such as burning, scratching or hitting body parts. While older definitions included behaviour such as interfering with wound healing, excessive skin picking, hair pulling and the ingestion of toxic substances or objects as self-harm in current terminology those are differentiated from the term self-harm.