1 / 19

Sex offenders: Treatment & risk assessment

Sex offenders: Treatment & risk assessment. Jill D. Stinson, PhD ETSU, Psychology. Disclosure Statement of Financial Interest. I, Jill Stinson, PhD,

ray-byrd
Download Presentation

Sex offenders: Treatment & risk assessment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Sex offenders: Treatment & risk assessment Jill D. Stinson, PhD ETSU, Psychology

  2. Disclosure Statement of Financial Interest • I, Jill Stinson, PhD, DO NOT have a financial interest/arrangement or affiliation with one or more organizations that could be perceived as a real or apparent conflict of interest in the context of the subject of this presentation.

  3. Disclosure Statement of Unapproved/Investigative Use I, Jill Stinson, PhD, DO NOT anticipate discussing the unapproved/investigative use of a commercial product/device during this activity or presentation.

  4. Introduction • About your presenter • Outline for today • Who are we talking about? • Traditions & new approaches in sex offender treatment • Treatment effectiveness • Thinking about risk

  5. The sex offender…

  6. …is not what you think. • Heterogeneity of the population • Contact vs. non-contact offenders • Adult vs. child victims • Male vs. female victims • Familial vs. non-familial victims • High vs. medium vs. low risk • Juvenile sex offenders • Sex offenders with: • Paraphilias • Mental illness • Intellectual / developmental disabilities • Psychopathic traits

  7. Sex offender treatment • In the early days • Insight-oriented approaches • Behavioral reconditioning • Then later • Cognitive behavioral therapy • Pharmacological interventions • Relapse prevention

  8. Everyone wants treatment, right?

  9. Sex offender treatment • Treatment effectiveness research • Measured by reduction in sex offense recidivism • Comparisons made between treatment vs. no treatment • Follow-up generally 5-10 years • Not a lot of standardization among treatment protocols

  10. Sex offender treatment • Does treatment work? Um, not sure. • Problems with treatment effectiveness research • Short-term treatment approaches • Focus on one outcome • Low base rates of sex offending behavior • Underreporting of sex offending • Are we using the right treatment?

  11. Sex offender treatment • Special challenges in sex offender treatment • Involuntary treatment participation • High social cost of participation • Personal discomfort • Lack of insight or distress • Blame, denial, & minimization

  12. Sex offender treatment • What doesn’t seem to work very well • Highly aversive methods • Indiscriminate chemical castration • Victim empathy training • Avoidance strategies • Confrontation • Overcoming denial • General social skills training

  13. Sex offender treatment • Traditional goals • Prevent sexual offending • Control sexual behavior • Eliminate deviant sexual interests, thoughts, & fantasies ……But is sex all we care about?

  14. Emerging treatment trends • Good Lives Model • Circles of Support & Accountability • Safe Offender Strategies

  15. Emerging treatments – New goals • Developing appropriate boundaries • Normative relationships with others • Forming good social support networks • Having prosocial interests and goals • Treating mental illness • Treating substance abuse problems • Positive life skills & experiences (job, home, recreational activities, religious or spiritual involvement, etc.)

  16. Sex offender recidivism • Sex offense specific recidivism • Ranges from 10-15% over 5-10 year period post-release • General criminal recidivism • Ranges from 35-50% over 5-10 year period post-release • Special groups • Juvenile sex offenders • Sexually Violent Predators • About 5% of the sex offender population is responsible for the majority of sexual crime Measuring Risk

  17. Factors that increase risk (static) • Youthful age • Multiple arrests or incidents of sexual offending • Offenses against males • Multiple offenses against children • Offenses against strangers or non-family members • Other criminal arrests • History of non-compliance with supervision • Arrests for sexual offending as a juvenile • Limited history of normative intimate relationships Measuring Risk

  18. Factors that increase risk (dynamic) • Poor progress in treatment • Treatment dropout • Poor sexual self-regulation • Poor self-regulation • Limited insight into one’s own risk • Impulsivity • Paraphilias (deviant sexual interests) • Psychopathy, or diagnosis of ASPD • Offense-supportive beliefs Measuring Risk

  19. What now? • Better understanding of treatment effectiveness • What works, for whom, & when? • Prevention practices • More dynamic understanding of risk • Risk is like the weather • Mechanisms of risk

More Related