Title: Treatment for offenders with learning disabilities
1Treatment for offenders with learning
disabilities
- Glynis Murphy, Tizard Centre, Kent Univ
g.h.murphy_at_kent.ac.uk - Alison Giraud-Saunders, Foundation for People
with Learning Disabilities - alisongs_at_btinternet.com
2Plan
- NOMS programmes
- Thinking Skills programme- Background- Process
of negotiation with NOMS- State of play-
Content of programme - Sex offender programmes- Non-disabled disabled
sex offenders- Treatment for non-disabled sex
offenders- Treatment for sex offenders with
learning disabilities
3NOMS programmes
- NOMS develops treatment programmes for people in
prison and on probation - Eg. Thinking Skills managing anger reducing
substance misuse sex offending (SOTP) - Very carefully vetted all developed in-house
- Accreditation system strict quality control
- BUT All programmes have IQ 80 cut-off
- Only widespread adapted programme is ASOTP
- Gill case made Ministry of Justice more aware
motivated to solve problem
4Adapting delivery of the Thinking Skills Programme
- Alison Giraud-Saunders
- Foundation for People with Learning Disabilities
- www.learningdisabilities.org.uk
5- We promote the rights, quality of life and
opportunities of people with learning
disabilities and their families. We do this by
working with people with learning disabilities,
their families and those who support them
6Offending behaviour programmes
7Gaining entry for prisoners with learning
disabilities
- Inspired by No One Knows
- Glynis and Peter Oakes
- Proposal to DH
- Gill case
- Grant award April 2010
8Round and round.
9Negotiations with NOMS
- Adaptation delivery
- Evaluation feasibility
- Intellectual property
- Role of project worker
10The real start
- Project worker
- Training (project worker)
- Adapting
- Evaluation
- Theory
- Facilitator training
11Issues
- Theory based on WAIS
- Selection of participants WASI
- Fitting in with regime
- Accessibility vs programme integrity
- Volume of materials
- Measures of progress (participants)
12Outline
- Course materials cover
- Self control
- Problem solving
- Positive relationships
- Consent, 11s
- Conditions of success
- Facilitator instructions
- Realistic evaluation
13Were on the way!
- First pilot HMP Whatton
- Planning second pilot
- Sustainability
14Conclusion
- Routine availability of adapted programmes
- Custody and community
- Alternatives to prison
- and to hospital
15Sexual offending by non-disabled men disabled
men
- For both groups
- Grossly under-reported to police
- 90-95 of sex offenders are men
- Most perpetrators are known to victim
- Men often engage in grooming stalking of
victims - Men hold many cognitive distortions
16Treatment for non-disabled sex offenders recent
years
- 1960s 1970s Seen as result of deviant sexual
interests arousal - Led to behavioural techniques eg aversion
therapy, orgasmic reconditioning covert
sensitisation - Belief in medical model anti-androgens
- Little evidence of effectiveness under-provision
of treatment - Move to CBT approach
17Marshalls model of sex offending
18Components of cognitive behavioural treatment
- Enhancing self-esteem
- Challenging changing cognitive distortions
- Developing victim empathy
- Developing social functioning
- Modifying sexual preferences
- Ensuring relapse prevention
- See Marshall et al.s 1999 book for an excellent
guide
19Does it work for non-disabled men?
- Hanson et al, 2002 Meta-analysis of 43 CBT
studies of sex offender treatment (over 9,000
participants overall) - sexual offence recidivism
rate 12 for treated men vs 17 for untreated
men - Aos, Miller Drake 2006 reviewed controlled CBT
studies. CBT produced reduction in recidivism
(31 reduction in community 15 in prison
sample) - Kenworthy et al, 2006 Cochrane review of 9 RCTs
(over 500 offenders), mostly paedophiles variety
of treatment methods- one large CBT trial
showed a definite reduction in recidivism- one
large group psychotherapy trial showed treatment
increased risk.
20Cognitive behavioural treatment for men with
without LD in UK
- CBT widely available for non-disabled convicted
sex offenders SOTP- in prison - in community
(run by probation) - Men with LD mostly excluded from these - some
prisons run ASOTP - Janet Shaw clinic in
Solihull (ASOTP), - Northgate hosp programme
near Newcastle, - Bill Lindsays programme in
Scotland, - our SOTSEC-ID programme (about 25
sites across the country)
21Most adapted programmes have core assessments (eg
below is SOTSEC-ID list)
- Once only IQ, adaptive behaviour, language,
autism - Pre Post group treatment- Sexual Knowledge
Attitude Scale (SAKS)- Victim Empathy scale,
adapted (Beckett Fisher)- Sex Offender
Self-Appraisal Scale (Bray Foreshaws SOSAS)-
Questionnaire on Attitudes Consistent with Sex
Offending (Bill Lindsay et al.s QACSO) - Recidivism
22Treatment content (SOTSEC-ID)
- Group purpose, rule setting
- Human relations sex education
- The cognitive model (thoughts, feelings, action)
- Sexual offending model (based on Finklehor model)
- General empathy victim empathy
- Relapse prevention
- Compared to non-LD programmes Far more slow
offence disclosure more on sex education far
more pictorial material less sophisticated on
cognitive side
23Does group CBT work for men with LD?
- Lindsay et al (1998a, b) showed some improvements
in 6 men with LD paedophilic offences 4 men
with LD exhibitionism, after CBT - Lindsay Smith (1998) showed 2 years CBT was
more effective than 1 yr CBT for men with LD on
probation - Rose et al (2002) CBT 2hrs/week for 16 weeks,
for 5 men found reduced (improved) scores but
changes not significant - Craig et al 2006 no changes in cognitive
distortions in 7mth CBT - Lindsay et al 2006 70 harm reduction in 29
repeat sexual offenders with ID, after CBT - Williams et al, 2007 significant improvements in
scores from pre-group to post-group in 150 men
following CBT in ASOTP programmes in prisons (not
all ID)
24Significant changes in cognitive distortions,
sexual knowledge empathy -SOTSEC-ID
25Further sexually abusive behaviour (SOTSEC-ID)
- During the year of the treatment group most men
did not show further sexually abusive behaviour
in 4 men (out of 48) they DID show non-contact
offences - In the 6 mths follow-up period most men did not
show further sexually abusive behaviour in 7
cases (5 men) DID show non-contact offences (5
cases) or sexual touch through clothing (2 cases) - Re-offending No relationship with pre- or post-
group scores IQ, presence of mental health
problems, personality disorder, living in secure
setting, being victim of SA, history of
offending. - Poor prognosis Concurrent therapy diagnosis of
autism / aspergers syndrome - Longer follow-up data just collected (by Kathryn
Heaton) above findings still hold
26Service user views (SOTSEC-ID)
- Good understanding of basic facts (duration,
venue, facilitators, rules, e.g.
confidentiality rule) - Good understanding of why referred Because of
my sex offence to see if it would do me any
good To help my sex urges, keep them under
control to be a better person when meeting women
in the communityTo help us stop getting into
trouble with the police because I go out to
masturbate - What they learntStopped me touching girls
How people feel about us masturbating (in
public) Learnt not to go after women Learnt
to help other people in the group What the
police do when they arrest you
27Service user views (contd)
- Best things
- Having support every week
- We talked about feelings about things, sorting
the problems out - Working together, helping each other
- We helped each other discuss ... work on ways of
preventing problems in the future - Worst things
- Telling people very private stuff, keeping
people on trust - Some didnt talk
28Thank you!
- Alison Giraud-Saunders
- alisongs_at_btinternet.com
- 07721 843290
- www.learningdisabilities.org.uk
- Glynis Murphy
- g.h.murphy_at_kent.ac.uk