Title: Assessing Risk for Violence
1Assessing Risk for Violence
- Stephen D. Hart
- Simon Fraser University
2Violence
- Actual, attempted, or threatened physical harm
that is deliberate and nonconsenting - Includes violence against victims who cannot give
full, informed consent - Includes fear-inducing behavior, where threats
may be implicit or directed at third parties
3Violence as a Choice
- The proximal cause of violence is a decision to
act violently - The decision is influenced by a host of
biological, psychological, and social factors - Neurological insult, hormonal abnormality
- Psychosis, personality disorder
- Exposure to violent models, attitudes that
condone violence
4We Cant Predict Violence
- Violence is too rare to predict with any
accuracy, by any means - Professional decisions are particularly bad
- Predictions of violence necessitate a
deterministic view of behavior
5Or, Can We?
- The issue of prediction is moot
- Dont predict, evaluate risk (e.g., suicide)
- Regardless, predictions made by professionals are
reliably better than chance - The scientific literature on violence is large
and growing - Any choice can be predicted
6What is Risk Assessment?
- Process of understanding a hazard to limit its
potential negative impact - Hazard identification (which events occur?)
- Hazard accounting (how frequently?)
- Scenarios of exposure (under which conditions?)
- Risk characterization (conditions present?)
- Risk management (which interventions?)
7Nature of Violence Risk
- Violence risk is a multi-faceted construct
- Nature what kinds of violence might occur?
- Severity how serious might the violence be?
- Frequency how often might violence occur?
- Imminence how soon might violence occur?
- Likelihood what is the probability that violence
might occur?
8Risk is Context-Specific
- We never know a persons risk for violence we
merely estimate it assuming certain conditions - Assuming institutionalization, assuming release
with supervision, assuming release without
treatment for substance use - Consequently, relative or conditional risk
judgments are more useful than absolute or
probabilistic risk judgments
9Goals of Risk Assessment
- To make better decisions
- Improve consistency
- Protect public safety
- Guide intervention
- Protect clients rights
- Liability management
10Risk CharacterizationContent Issues
11What to Include?
- Three primary criteria
- Empirical (predictive accuracy)
- Professional (practical utility)
- Legal (fairness and reasonableness)
12Problems With Empirical Criterion
- Not everything that is important has been proven
or validated scientifically - Can lead to exclusion of good but rare or
difficult-to-assess risk factors - Prediction ? cause, explanation, or intervention
- Can lead to inclusion of bad but common or
easy-to-assess factors
13Example The SIEVE
- Age Young is bad
- Sex Male is bad
- Facial hair Dense is bad
- Foot size Big is bad
14Problems With Professional Criterion
- Focus on dynamic factors may bias risk
assessments - Can lead to exclusion of good but static or
easy-to-ignore factors - Conventional wisdom of professionals may be plain
wrong - Can lead to inclusion of bad but vivid or
dramatic factors
15Example Clinical Intuition
- Depression Present is good
- Anxiety Present is good
- Intelligence High is good
- Rorschach Seeing viscera is bad
16Problems With Legal Criterion
- Useful for excluding risk factors, but not for
including them - It can be argued that almost any risk factor is
unfair or unreasonable in some respect
17Risk CharacterizationProcedural Issues
18Conventional Approaches
- Professional judgment
- Unstructured or clinical
- Anamnestic (see Melton et al., 1997)
- Structured (e.g., HCR-20, SVR-20)
- Actuarial decision-making
- Psychological tests (e.g., MMPI-2, PCL-R)
- Risk scales (e.g., VRAG, RRASOR)
19Professional Judgment
- Most commonly-used method for violence risk
assessment - Familiar to professionals
- Familiar to courts and tribunals
- General strengths of method
- Flexible (easy administration)
- Requires limited training and technology
- Person-centered (idiographic)
20Unstructured Features
- No constraints on evaluation
- Any information can be considered
- Information can be gathered in any manner
- No constraints on decisions
- Information can be weighted and combined in any
manner - Results can be communicated in any manner
21Unstructured Limitations
- No systematic empirical support
- Low agreement (unreliable)
- Low accuracy (unvalidated)
- Foundation is unclear (unimpeachable)
- Relies on charismatic authority
- Decisions are broad bandwidth
- Focus is on culpability, not action
22Anamnestic Features
- Imposes minor structure on evaluation
- Must consider, at a minimum, nature and context
of past violence - Action-oriented
- Logically related to development of risk
management strategies - Consistent with relapse prevention or harm
reduction approaches
23Anamnestic Limitations
- Unknown reliability
- Unknown validity
- Assumes that history will repeat itself
- Violent careers are static
- Violent people are specialists
24Structured Features
- Imposes major structure on evaluation
- Must consider, at a minimum, a fixed and explicit
set of risk factors - Specifies process for information-gathering
- Imposes minor structure on decision
- Specifies language for communicating findings
- Action-oriented
25Structured Limitations
- Requires retooling of evaluation process
- Systematized information-gathering
- New training and technology
- Justification for imposing structure requires
inductive logic (faith) - What works elsewhere will work here
- Professional discretion is appropriate
26HCR-20
- HCR-20, version 2
- Webster, Douglas, Eaves, Hart (1997)
- Designed to assess risk for violence in those
with mental or personality disorders - 10 Historical, 5 Clinical, and 5 Risk Management
factors
27Applications
- Assess clinical evaluations of violence risk
across a broad range of populations and settings - Civil and forensic psychiatric, correctional
- Institution, community
- Monitor clinical and situational factors that may
be relevant to violence - Guide risk management strategies
28Conceptual Basis
- Intended to bridge clinical and empirical domains
and knowledge bases - Evidence-based risk assessment
- Content determined rationally
- Based on reviews of scientific and professional
literatures - Not optimized on a particular sample
29Temporal Organization
30Historical Factors
- Previous violence
- Young age at first violence
- Relationship instability
- Employment problems
- Substance use problems
- Major mental illness
- Psychopathy
- Early maladjustment
- Personality disorder
- Prior supervision failure
31Clinical Risk Management Factors
- Lack of insight
- Negative attitudes
- Active symptoms of major mental illness
- Impulsivity
- Unresponsive to treatment
- Plans lack feasibility
- Exposure to destabilizers
- Lack of personal support
- Noncompliance with remediation attempts
- Stress
32Actuarial Decision-Making
- Commonly-used adjunctive method for violence risk
assessment - Familiar to some professionals (psychologists)
- Somewhat familiar to courts and tribunals
- General strengths of method
- Highly structured/systematic (objective)
- Empirically-based (scientific)
33Psychological Tests Features
- Measure some disposition that predicts violence,
according to past research - Reliability and validity of test-based decisions
has been evaluated - Imposes major structure
- On some part of the evaluation process
- On some part of the decision-making process
34Psychological Tests Limitations
- Require professional judgment
- Which tests to use
- How to interpret scores
- Justification of use requires inductive logic
- Our population is like theirs
- Our use of the test is like theirs
35PCLSV
- Symptom construct rating scale
- requires clinical / expert judgment
- based on all data
- Data obtained from two primary sources
- review of case history (required)
- interview / observation (recommended)
36PCLSV Items
- Part 1
- Superficial
- Grandiose
- Deceitful
- Lacks remorse
- Lacks empathy
- Doesnt accept responsibility
- Part 2
- Impulsive
- Poor behavioral controls
- Lacks goals
- Irresponsible
- Adolescent antisocial behavior
- Adult antisocial behavior
37PCL Summary 1
- The correlation between the PCL and violent
recidivism averages about .35 - Regardless of length of follow-up
- Even in sex offenders, forensic patients, women,
delinquents even in nonviolent, nonpsychopathic
offenders - Association is quasi-linear (positive and
monotonic)
38PCL Summary 2
- Among psychopaths (e.g., PCL-R gt 30) released
from prison, the 5-year violent reoffense rate is
about 70 - Versus about 30 in low group (lt 20) and 50 in
medium group (21-29) - Versus low group, psychopaths are at very high
risk for reoffense (rate ratio 2x to 3x odds
ratio 5x to 10x)
39PCL Summary 3
- Psychopaths not only commit more violence, they
commit different kinds of violence - The violence of psychopaths often has unusual or
atypical motivations - Instrumentality/gain
- Impulsivity/opportunism
- Sadism
40PCL Conclusions
- Psychopathy must be assessed as part of
comprehensive violence risk assessments - The presence of psychopathy compels a conclusion
of high risk - The absence of psychopathy does not compel a
conclusion of low risk - Psychopathy must be assessed by trained
professionals using adequate procedures
41Decision Tree
Homicidal/suicidal?
YES
High Risk
NO
Sexual sadism?
High Risk
YES
NO
Psychopathic? (e.g., PCL-R gt 30)
High Risk
YES
NO
Assess other factors (e.g., HCR-20)
42Risk Scales Features
- Designed solely to predict an outcome
- High-fidelity
- Optimized for specific outcome, time period,
population, and context - Impose rigid structure
- On all of the evaluation process
- On all of the decision-making process
43Risk Scales Limitations
- Still require professional judgment
- Which scales to use
- How to interpret scores
- Justification of use still requires induction
- Our population is like theirs
- Our use of the test is like theirs
- Results may be easily misinterpreted
- Pseudo-objective, pseudo-scientific
44VRAG
- Violence Risk Appraisal Guide
- Quinsey et al. (1998)
- Constructed in adult male patients assessed or
treated at a maximum security hospital - 12 items weighted according to ability to
postdict violence over 7 year follow-up - Total scores divided into 9 bins, with estimated
p(violence) from 0 to 100
45VRAG Items
- PCL-R score
- Elem. school problems
- Personality disorder
- Age ()
- Separated from parents under age 16
- Failure on prior conditional release
- Nonviolent offense history
- Never married
- Schizophrenia ()
- Victim injury ()
- Alcohol abuse
- Female victim ()
46VRAG Potential Problems
- The VRAG is, in essence, a history lesson
- What if patient profile changes?
- What if p (violence) changes?
- What if the assessment context changes?
47VRAG Actual Problems?
- Paul Bernardo is a convicted serial murderer (3
sexual homicides) and serial rapist (75 known
rapes) - Currently serving life imprisonment for murder,
and an indeterminate sentence for the rapes - VRAG completed on the basis of case history data
48Bernardos VRAG Results
- PCL-R score 4
- Elem. school -1
- Personality disorder 3
- Age 0
- Separated from -2
- Failure on prior 0
- Nonviolent offense -2
- Marital status -2
- Schizophrenia 1
- Victim injury -2
- Alcohol abuse 1
- Female victim -1
Total -1 Bin 4 p(viol) 17 - 31
49Problems With All
- Focus on negative characteristics
- Sticky labels
- What about strengths (resources, buffer
factors)? - Risk assessment ¹ risk management
- What to do with high-risk individuals?
- Quality control
- Who will assess risk, and how?
50Risk References
- Boer, D. P., Hart, S. D., Kropp, P. R.,
Webster, C. D. (1997). Manual for the Sexual
Violence Risk-20 Professional guidelines for
assessing risk of sexual violence. Burnaby,
British Columbia Simon Fraser University. - Grove, W. M., Meehl, P. E. (1996). Comparative
efficiency of informal (subjective,
impressionistic) and formal (mechanical,
algorithmic) prediction procedures The
clinical-statistical controversy. Psychology,
Public Policy, and Law, 2, 293-323. - Kropp, P. R., Hart, S. D., Webster, C.W.,
Eaves, D. (1995). Manual for the Spousal Assault
Risk Assessment Guide, 2nd ed. Vancouver, BC
British Columbia Institute on Family Violence. - Meehl, P. E. (1996). Clinical versus statistical
prediction A theoretical analysis and a review
of the literature. Northvale, NJ Jason Aronson.
(Original work published in 1954.)
51Risk References (cont.)
- Melton, G. B., Petrila, J., Poythress, N. G.,
Slobogin, C. (1997). Psychological evaluations
for the courts A handbook for mental health
professionals and lawyers (2nd ed.). New York
Guilford. - Quinsey, V. L., Rice, M. E., Harris, G. T.,
Cormier, C. (1998). Violent offenders Appraising
and managing risk. Washington, DC American
Psychological Association. - Webster, C. D., Douglas, K. S., Eaves, D.,
Hart, S. D. (1997). HCR-20 Assessing risk for
violence, version 2. Burnaby, British Columbia
Simon Fraser University.
52But How Accurate AreCharacterizations of Risk?
53A Complex Phenomenon
- Studying the accuracy of risk characterizations
is difficult due to the complexity of - The characterizations
- The violence
- The follow-up
- Indexes of accuracy
54The Characterizations
- Evaluator Professional vs. researcher novice
versus expert - Process Clinical vs. actuarial, contextual vs.
context-free - Timing Admission vs. discharge, static vs.
dynamic - Metric Uni- vs. multi-dimensional, categorical
vs. continuous
55The Violence
- Direction Self vs. others, acquaintances vs.
strangers - Nature Instrumental vs. reactive
- Severity Threats vs. battery vs. homicide
- Frequency Single vs. multiple events
- Context Situational precipitants or co-factors
56The Follow-Up
- Data source Patient vs. collaterals vs. records
- Time at risk Weeks vs. months vs. years
- Interventions Dynamic factors, life events
- Monitoring Continuous vs. endpoint
57Indexes of Accuracy
- Comparison group Other patients vs. normals
- Statistic Uni- vs. multi-variate, time
- Weighting of errors Equal vs. differential
- Interpretation Chance vs. status quo vs.
perfection
58Science Responds to Complexity
59Example Psychopathy
Harris, Rice, Cormier (1991)
60Example (cont.)
- In this study...
- Accuracy of positive predictions is 77
- Accuracy of negative predictions is 79
- Overall accuracy is 78
- Chance-corrected agreement is 53
- Correlation is .53
- Odds ratio is 12.5
61Example (cont.)
- So, how did we do?
- Relative to chance Great!
- Relative to perfection Awful!
- Relative to the status quo ???
62What is the status quo?
- Predictions of violence using the PCL-R typically
have an effect size (r) of about .35 the average
effect size for psychosis is about .30 - An effect size of .40 may be the forensic sound
barrier - But what is the status quo in other human
endeavors?
63Meta-Meta-Analysis
- Lipsey Wilson (1993) reviewed 302 meta-analyses
- Determined typical effect sizes for
psychological, educational, and medical
interventions
64Psychological Interventions
- CBT ? depression .44
- Psychotherapy any ? .39
- Correctional programs (youths) .23 any ?
- Diversion (youths) ? recidivism .20
- Correctional treatment (adults) .12 any ?
65Educational Interventions
- Small classes ? class climate .26
- Tutoring ? grades .20
- Small classes ? grades .10
- Media campaigns ? seatbelt use .06
66Medical Interventions
- Speech therapy ? stuttering .54
- Bypass surgery ? angina pain .37
- Cyclosporine ? organ rejection .15
- Bypass surgery ? mortality .07
- ASA ? heart attack .04
67Violence Predictions in Context
- Speech therapy ? stuttering .54
- CBT ? depression .44
- Bypass surgery ? angina pain .37
- Psychopathy ? violence .35
- Psychosis ? violence .30
- Small classes ? class climate .26
68Conclusions
- Violence predictions, on the whole, are just as
good as most other human prognostications - Consider other fields...
- Stock analysts
- Meteorologists
- Fire inspectors
- Structural engineers
69Risk AssessmentReports and Testimony
70General Issues
- Acknowledge professional qualifications
- But, less important than approach used
- Acknowledge limits of information base
- But, comprehensiveness depends on context
- Explain risk factors considered
- Empirical, professional, legal justification
- Acknowledge uncertainty of predictions
71Do Dont
- Use multiple approaches
- Make relative or conditional risk judgments
- Make detailed risk management recommendations
- Rely on a single approach
- Make absolute or probabilistic risk judgments
- Ignore the issue of what can or should be done
72Special Issues Professional
- Report should tell a story
- Summarize the circumstances of past violence and
any recent changes in them - Describe the likely nature and context
(scenarios) of future violence - Identify factors that may increase risk and
therefore serve as flags for re-assessment - Recommend, evaluate, and prioritize risk
management strategies
73Cross-Exam Professional
- What, if any, is the basis of your expertise in
the assessment of violence risk? - What is the scientific basis for your decision
(not) to follow these procedures? - What is the scientific basis for your decision
(not) to consider these factors? - Can you state with any reasonable degree of
scientific certainty the likelihood that X will
be violent?
74Special Issues Actuarial
- Report should provide full interpretation of test
scores - Be familiar with research supporting the tests
reliability and validity - Discuss general limitations of the test
- Discuss limitations of the test in this case
75Cross-Exam Actuarial
- Isnt it arbitrary to consider risk factors such
as A, B, and C, but to ignore D, E, and F? - Is there any scientific evidence that scale Z
predicts outcome Y in patients at this clinic? - How do you know that predictions using scale Z
are accurate for Mr. X? - By using scale Z, arent you simply relying on
statistical profile evidence?
76Contact Information
- Stephen D. Hart, Ph.D.Department of
PsychologySimon Fraser UniversityBurnaby,
British ColumbiaCanada V5A 1S6 - Tel 604.291.5485 / Fax 604.291.3427E-mail
shart_at_arts.sfu.caURL www.sfu.ca/psychology/group
s/faculty/hart