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The Clinical Practice of Risk Assessment of Sexual Violence

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Joe Judge There are significant literatures on risk factors for recidivism in sexual offenders and on the predictive accuracy of different types of risk assessment tool. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Clinical Practice of Risk Assessment of Sexual Violence


1
The Clinical Practice of Risk Assessment of
Sexual Violence
  • Joe Judge

2
Introduction
  • There are significant literatures on risk factors
    for recidivism in sexual offenders and on the
    predictive accuracy of different types of risk
    assessment tool.
  • Less is known about how risk factors are used and
    combined in clinical practice.
  • This is especially true of Structured
    Professional Judgement approaches.

3
Risk Factors for Recidivism in Sexual Offenders
  • Hanson and Bussiere (1998)
  • Recidivism best predicted by sexual deviancy and
    general criminological factors.
  • Hanson and Morton-Bourgon (2004, 2005)
  • Uses cumulative meta-analytic technique
  • Recidivism predicted by sexual deviance and
    antisocial orientation.
  • Mann et al. (2010)
  • Conceptualises risk factors differently
  • Psychologically meaningful risk factors

4
Mann et al. (2010)
  • Empirically Supported
  • Sexual preoccupation
  • Sexual preference for pubescent or prepubescent
    children
  • Sexualised violence
  • Multiple paraphilias
  • Offence supportive attitudes
  • Emotional congruence with children
  • Lack of emotionally intimate relationships with
    adults
  • Lifestyle impulsiveness
  • Poor problem solving
  • Resistance to rules and supervision
  • Grievance / hostility
  • Negative social influence
  • Promising
  • Hostile beliefs about women
  • Machiavellianism
  • Lack of concern for others
  • Dysfunctional coping
  • Sexualised coping
  • Externalised coping

5
Mann et al. (2010)
  • Unsupported but with interesting exceptions
  • Denial
  • Low self esteem
  • Major mental illness
  • Loneliness
  • Adversarial sexual orientation
  • Fragile narcissism
  • Sexual entitlement
  • Little or no relationship to sexual recidivism
  • Depression
  • Social skills deficits
  • Poor victim empathy
  • Lack of motivation for treatment (as assessed
    pre-treatment)

6
Judge et al.
  • Sexual deviance is an evidence based risk factor
  • Psychopathy is an evidence based risk factor
  • Inconsistent findings with respect to denial.
  • Also some gaps in the literature.

7
How is this information used in clinical practice?
  • Looked at data from NHS Lothian Sex Offender
    Liaison Service (SOLS)
  • Regression analysis of summary risk judgements.
  • Are the factors that predict risk judgement the
    factors that predict recidivism?
  • Or is something else important?

8
NHS Lothian SOLS
  • Developed to provide clinical input to help
    criminal justice agencies manage sex offenders in
    the community.
  • Offers comprehensive clinical assessment of
    individuals whom CJ agencies are finding
    difficult to manage.
  • 78 have personality disorder diagnoses (Russell
    Darjee, 2012)
  • Assessment and management advice structured using
    Risk for Sexual Violence Protocol (RSVP)
  • Assessment process described in detail elsewhere
    (Russell Darjee, 2012)
  • Responses of 96 individuals used in data analysis

9
Hypotheses (Based on systematic review and
previously existing meta-analyses)
  1. Psychopathy will be a statistically significant
    predictor of sexual violence risk score.
  2. Sexual deviance will be a statistically
    significant predictor of sexual violence risk
    score.
  3. Denial will not be a statistically significant
    predictor of sexual violence risk score.
  4. Sexual preoccupation will be a statistically
    significant predictor of sexual violence risk
    score.
  5. Problems with intimate relationships will be a
    statistically significant predictor of sexual
    violence risk score.

10
Data analysis
  • Ordinal logistic regression
  • Dependent variables
  • MAPPA Risk Score
  • RMA Risk Score
  • Independent Variables
  • Psychopathy (RSVP Item 12 Coded 0-2)
  • Sexual Deviance (RSVP Item 11 Coded 0-2)
  • Denial (RSVP Item 6 Coded 0-2)
  • Sexual Preoccupation (SARN-SO Coded 0-2)
  • Problems with intimate relationships (RSVP Item
    16 Coded 0-2)

11
Results
  • Psychopathy significantly associated with risk
    score.
  • Sexual deviance was not significantly associated
    with risk score.
  • Denial significantly associated with risk score.
  • Sexual preoccupation was associated with risk
    score.
  • Problems with intimate relationships was not
    associated with risk score.
  • Best model accounted for only 40 percent of
    variance in risk score.

12
Sexual deviance is not a statistically
significant predictor of risk score
  • Explained by difficulty in assessing and
    measuring sexual deviance?
  • Notoriously difficult task.
  • Do different types of sexual deviance operate
    differently? (eg. Sexual sadism vs. paedophilia)
  • Outcome variables take into account imminence of
    risk
  • For example, possible that offender may meet
    criteria for paedophilia but have no access to
    children influences score on outcome variable.

13
Denial is a statistically significant predictor
of risk score
  • Relationship between denial is complex
  • Harkins et al. (2010) Denial protective?
  • Depends on whether denial viewed dichotomously or
    dimensionally.
  • Ware and Mann (2012) suggest overemphasis on
    challenging denial.
  • Blagden et al (2011) suggest professionals not
    always aware that they are challenging denial.
  • Is this operating in present study?
  • But again, denial difficult to assess and measure

14
Problems with intimate relationships not a
statistically significant predictor of risk score
  • Closer scrutiny of the data revealed that only 5
    percent of the offenders demonstrated no evidence
    of problems with intimate relationships
  • Unclear if this is true of sex offenders in
    general or limited to those referred to the SOLS.

15
Unexplained Variance
  • Best explanatory model accounted for only 40
    percent of variance.
  • Possible that relevant independent variables not
    included in the analysis.
  • But what accounts for the other 60 percent?
  • The process of getting from item scores to
    formulation, risk scenarios is not well
    described.
  • Direction for future research?

16
Implications for research
  • Research investigating the process of SPJ risk
    assessment.
  • How are risk judgements arrived at using this
    method?
  • Hart and Boer (2010) suggest qualitative analysis
    might be helpful.
  • Specific focus on risk formulation? (Reliability,
    validity etc)

17
Implications for practice
  • Difficulty in measurement of relevant variables.
  • Revision of RSVP?
  • Debate about inclusion of denial as a risk factor.
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