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Risk Formulation: The Key to Risk Management Planning

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Title: Risk Formulation: The Key to Risk Management Planning


1
Risk Formulation The Key to Risk Management
Planning
  • Dr Caroline Logan
  • Consultant Specialist Clinical Psychologist
  • in Risk Assessment and Management, Mersey Care
    NHT Trust
  • Board Member, Risk Management Authority

2
With thanks
3
Introduction
  • Your decisions are likely to be regarded as
    acceptable if you can demonstrate that
  • You and your staff conformed to the relevant
    Trust/locality policies and procedures and
    national guidelines
  • You used the best information available, you
    tried to obtain the information you did not
    possess, and you used empirically-based methods
    of evaluating the information you had
  • You can account for your decisions and chosen
    courses of action, and you documented your
    decision-making appropriately
  • You informed the most appropriate people of your
    concerns
  • You took all reasonable steps to try to manage
    risk

4
Overview
  • Introduction
  • A model of risk assessment and risk management
  • Structured professional judgement and risk
    formulation
  • A short case study
  • The way forward in risk management planning
  • Conclusions

5
Model
  • Risk assessment is
  • An estimation of risk potential based on our
    understanding of the presence and relevance of
    certain conditions that we assume to be risk
    factors
  • Result Risk formulation

6
Model contd/...
  • Risk management is
  • Action taken to prevent the harmful outcomes
    thought possible by anticipating what these
    outcomes might look like (scenario planning)
  • Implementation of continuous ongoing action
    designed to monitor risk and respond
    appropriately to early warning signs of a relapse
    to violence
  • Creating a traceable route from risk assessment
    to risk management
  • Result A written plan of action

7
1. Model contd/...
  • A plan of action providing
  • A traceable route from risk assessment to risk
    management and back again and again and again
  • A risk management plan is a live document,
    relevant to a specified time period, and should
    be updated
  • Practice in respect of risk management is
    stratified
  • Target triggers or destabilising factors first
    ensure security as a priority

8
Model contd/...
  • Risk of harm to others
  • The proximal cause of violence is a decision to
    act violently
  • The decision is influenced by a host of
    psychological, social, biological, and contextual
    factors including
  • Mental and personality disorder
  • Exposure to violent models, attitudes that
    condone violence, criminal peers
  • Neurological insult, genetic/hormonal abnormality
  • As well as proximal triggers (e.g., provocation,
    anger, intoxication)

9
Model contd/...
  • But risk is context-specific ...
  • We can never know a persons risk for violence
  • We merely estimate risk on the basis of our
    knowledge of various relevant individual
    (internal) and situational (external) factors and
    how they relate to one another

10
1. Model contd/...
  • So, what do we need to make robust decisions
    about risk?

11
1. Model contd/...
  • Need a decision-making framework that
  • Promotes consistency between clinicians
  • Can facilitate communication between parties
  • Identifies outcomes of interest
  • Takes the individual patient into account
  • Takes all relevant risk factors into account
  • Takes protective factors into account
  • Is flexible
  • That links risk assessment to risk management
  • And, overall, is reviewable, accountable,
    transparent

12
1. Model contd/...
  • Because the reality is
  • Often concern about risks in multiple domains
  • Over varying time scales
  • Where risks are often linked
  • Risk of reoffending per se is often not a
    priority
  • Therefore, a framework for understanding risk
    assessment and management is essential to help
    practitioners select the most relevant
    information quickly

13
1. Model contd/...
  • Therefore, there is a need for both
  • A framework for understanding risk
  • AND tools that you can use to make complex
    decisions about certain risks as evidence-based,
    accountable and transparent as possible

14
1. Model contd/...
  • Framework?
  • Clarity about what we mean by risk assessment
    (definition)
  • Clarity about what we want to prevent (focus)
  • An understanding of what can make violence or
    sexual violence happen (knowledge)
  • A judgement about whats relevant in this case
    (experience)
  • Leading to a risk formulation (skill)

15
1. Model contd/...
  • Framework contd/
  • Directly resulting in a time-specific plan of
    action that will
  • Limit the role of risk factors in generating
    harmful outcomes and
  • (Ideally) enhance the role of protective factors
    in inhibiting harmful outcomes
  • Which will in turn inform risk assessment and
    subsequent management (an individual plan)
  • Back to assessment and management, over and over
    again (a dynamic, flexible plan)

16
1. Model contd/...
  • Frame clinical judgement about risk in this way
  • Under what conditions and over
  • what time period might what
  • kind of risk occur?

17
Structured professional judgement risk
formulation
  • Features of structured professional judgement
    tools
  • Tools are for use in key risk areas
  • Violence, sexual violence, etc.
  • They make very much more explicit the operation
    of this framework based on empirical evidence
  • Prevention not prediction is the objective of
    their use

18
SPJ risk formulation contd/
  • Features of structured professional judgement
    tools contd/
  • Rely on clinical expertise with a structured
    application
  • Rational and empirical selection of risk factors
  • Based on review of scientific (empirically-based)
    and professional literatures
  • Not sample-specific - broad-based applicability
    and generalisability
  • Inclusion of most potentially relevant risk
    factors

19
SPJ risk formulation contd/
  • Plus the facility to identify
  • Critical risk factors
  • Strengths (or protective factors) increasingly
    relevant
  • Idiographic (or signature) risk or protective
    factors
  • Facilitating flexibility and case-specific
    considerations
  • Practice of shared risk formulations and
    multidisciplinary collaboration encouraged
  • Supports professional judgement

20
SPJ risk formulation contd/
  • Structured Professional Judgement (SPJ)
    approaches
  • Offer practice guidelines
  • For specific behaviours (e.g., violence, sexual
    violence, stalking/harassment, domestic violence,
    self-harm/suicide, self-neglect, victimisation,
    etc)
  • Across a range of populations (adults, young
    people, service users with cognitive impairment,
    etc)

21
SPJ risk formulation contd/
  • How does SPJ work?

22
SPJ risk formulation contd/
  • Step one
  • Collate relevant information
  • Personal, social and forensic history
  • Using multiple methods
  • Using multiple sources
  • Considering multiple domains of functioning
  • Updating old/out-of-date information on risk
    factors
  • Documenting information reviewed
  • Evaluating the adequacy of information reviewed

23
SPJ risk formulation contd/
  • Step two
  • Identify those risk factors that are present in
    the case presently being assessed
  • NB. Numbers are NOT involved

24
SPJ risk formulation contd/
  • Step three
  • Make a professional judgement about the
    relevance of those risk factors to this
    individuals violent conduct

25
(SHARED) RISK FORMULATION (ideally, 2
knowledgeable practitioners)
26
SPJ risk formulation contd/
  • Broadly, a risk formulation is an analysis of ...
  • Specific risks (e.g., sexual violence, violence,
    stalking, domestic violence, etc)
  • Offending and other linked behaviour leading to
    identification of relevant risk factors,
    highlighting critical and signature risk factors
    and protective factors
  • Interactions between risk factors over time
  • Including short-term triggers
  • Taking into account possible future circumstances

27
SPJ risk formulation contd/
  • Specifically
  • Consider the different models of formulation
  • Therapeutic formulations (CBT, CAT, SFT, etc)
  • However, such formulations offer little guidance
    for decision-making about the offending process
    or the future

28
SPJ risk formulation contd/
  • Specifically
  • (Offending) behaviour formulations
  • Antecedents Behaviour Consequences (ABC)
  • Limited to specific behaviours
  • Predisposing, Precipitating, Perpetuating, and
    Protective (PPPP or 4Ps)
  • More comprehensive but also complex
  • Motivators (or Drivers), Destabilisers,
    (Dis)inhibitors (or 3Ds)
  • Also comprehensive but complex

29
SPJ risk formulation contd/
  • Step four Risk scenario planning
  • Scenarios are possible futures
  • Consider more than one
  • In constructing scenarios, consider
  • nature of future harm
  • severity of future harm
  • imminence
  • frequency or duration
  • likelihood that harm will actually occur

30
SPJ risk formulation contd/
  • Step five Risk management strategies
  • Treatment
  • treatment strategies relevant to risk management
    treatment priorities
  • Supervision
  • what restrictions on activity, movement,
    association, or communication are indicated?
  • Monitoring
  • identification and detection of (early) warning
    signs, indicators of change in risk
  • Victim safety planning
  • what steps could be taken to enhance the security
    of the victim?

31
SPJ risk formulation contd/
  • Step six Summary Judgments
  • Prioritisation case, treatment / management
    needs
  • Need for immediate action on what?
  • Risk of serious harm (impact)
  • Range of risks indicated (e.g., harm, self-harm/
    suicide, self-neglect, victimisation)
  • Frequency of review, and review of what?
  • Inc. the sell-by date of the report

32
SPJ risk formulation contd/
  • Process revisited with formulation
  • Gather information
  • Rate presence of risk factors
  • 2a. Ask WHY did these offences/behaviours
    happen?
  • 3. Rate relevance of risk factors
  • 3a. Establish whether and how relevant risk
    factors cluster
  • or coalesce
  • 4. Determine 2 future scenarios
  • 4a. Identify critical risk factors

33
SPJ risk formulation contd/
  • Process contd/
  • 4b. 4P/3D table why and how will offences/
    behaviours
  • happen in the future
  • 5a. Consider blue sky risk management options
  • treatment, supervision, monitoring, victim
    safety
  • planning ALL linked to relevant risk factors
    and risk
  • formulation
  • 5b. Consider essential risk management options
    from
  • those examined above
  • 6. Summary judgements

34
  • A SHORT CASE STUDY

35
Way forward in risk management planning
  • Collaboration
  • With colleagues and with the client
  • Differentiate between predisposing factors and
    precipitating or trigger factors
  • And think about motivation
  • Think about factors that maintain offending
    behaviour
  • Pay attention to protective factors or strengths
    for their role as offence inhibitors and as a way
    of gaining collaboration

36
Way forward in risk management planning contd/
  • Attend to risks in multiple areas consider the
    bigger picture
  • Harm, self-harm, suicide, self-neglect,
    victimisation, self-neglect
  • Make revisions to individual risk factors and
    risk formulation on the basis of effective
    ineffective risk management
  • Risk assessment and management is an iterative
    process
  • If possible, measure effective (effectiveness of)
    risk management
  • Multiple administrations of short-term
    assessments

37
The way forward in risk management planning
contd/
  • Protect the victims of offenders
  • Target hardening
  • Aim for transparent risk assessment and risk
    management planning over time
  • Be realistic!
  • Measuring prevented violence as a novel research
    objective

38
The way forward in risk management planning
contd/
  • A note on writing
  • Attend to grammar avoid sloppy writing makes
    your thinking look sloppy
  • Failure to proofread is like preparing a
    magnificent dinner and forgetting to set the
    table, so that the wretched guests have to
    scramble for the food with their hands.
  • Jessica Mitford,
    The Making of a

  • Muckraker, 1979 p22

39
The way forward in risk management planning
contd/
  • RMA Risk Management Standards
  • Collaborative working
  • Risk assessment
  • The foundation of risk management
  • Planning
  • To achieve clarity about objectives, to maintain
    proportionality, to coordinate action
  • Risk management strategies
  • How to actually achieve risk management
    objectives
  • Resulting in a preventative action plan and a
    contingency action plan

40
The way forward in risk management planning
contd/
  • RMA Risk Management Standards contd/
  • Accommodation and community management
  • Essential
  • Responding to change
  • A dynamic process
  • Organisational
  • Risk management needs resources and skills!

41
Conclusions
  • Prevention rather than prediction
  • Tools exist to give structure to your clinical
    judgement
  • The framework for clinical risk assessment is
    applicable whatever the circumstance

Risk assessment
Risk management
Risk formulation
42
Contact Information
  • Dr Caroline Logan
  • Psychological Services Directorate
  • Ashworth Hospital
  • Parkbourn
  • Maghull
  • Liverpool L31 1HW
  • Tel 0151 471 2420
  • E-mail caroline.logan_at_merseycare.nhs.uk
  • web www.rmascotland.gov.uk
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