Title: Treating Sex Offenders
1Treating Sex Offenders
- Dr Jeremy ODea
- Forensic Psychiatrist
2Sex Offenders
- Heterogenous Group
- Defined by Diverse group of Illegal Behaviours
- Cf to thieves
- Change over time eg Homosexuality
- Variety of psychiatric problems and diagnoses
- Differing treatment needs
- ?Antidepressants for all who attempt suicide
3Risk of Sexual Recidivism
- Relatively Low
- 10-13
- Sexual Deviance
- History Sexual Offending
- Sexually Deviant Arousal
- Small group with multiple re-offending
- Identify/treat/reduce risk
4Risk Assessment
- Actuarial Risk Assessment
- Static 99
- SONAR
- Clinical Risk Assessment
- Psychiatric Assessment
- Paraphilias
- HCL 20
- ?Penile Plethysmography
5Actuarial Risk Assessment
- Objective and Reliable
- Empirically Driven with Little Theoretical
Foundation - Questionable generalisation to other populations
- Static historical data generating Static risk
- Not amenable to change
- Ignore individual factors
- Make statements about groups not individuals
- Little use in low frequency behaviours like
sexual recidivism with individuals
6Clinical Risk Assessment
- Thorough psychiatric assessment with reasoned
opinion - Understanding phenomenology of sexual behaviours
for the purpose of treatment/risk management - Paraphilias
- Patient focused and treatment orientated
- Should take into consideration actuarial risk
assessment tools - Both static and dynamic risks
7Static 99Actuarial Risk Assessment Tool
- Over 1000
- Prisoners and secure psychiatric patients
- Canada and UK
- Followed for up to 30 years
- Looked at factors on RRASOR and SACJ-Min that
best predicted recidivism
8Static 99, Items
- Prior Sex Offences 3
- Charges/Convictions
- Prior Sentencing Dates (4) 1
- Any Convictions for 1
- non-contact sex offences
- Index Non Sexual Violence 1
- Prior Non Sexual Violence 1
- Any Unrelated Victim 1
- Any Stranger Victim 1
- Any Male Victim 1
- Age Under 25 1
- Single No 2 year live in relationship 1
9Static 99, Risk Categories
- Low 0,1/12
- Medium-Low 2,3/12
- Medium-High 4,5/12
- High 6/12
10Static 99,Hanson, Thornton, 2002
- Moderate predictive accuracy
- Sexual Recidivism
- Violent Recidivism
- Critics could suggest that insufficient for
decision making - Correlation 0.3
- Only accounts for 10 of the variance
- Given its lack of dynamic factors, it cannot be
used to - select treatment targets
- measure change
- evaluate whether offenders have benefited from
treatment
11Dynamic Risk Factors
- Sexual Deviance - Paraphilias
- Substance Abuse
- Psychiatric Illness
- ?Personality Disorder
- Social Situation
- Other
12Preventative Detention
- Queensland
- Dangerous Prisoners (Sexual Offenders) Act 2003
(Q) Act - Empowers State court to order continuing
detention of persons convicted of serious sexual
offences after expiry of their sentence where
there is an "unacceptable risk" of the prisoner
committing a serious sexual offence in the future - Upheld by High Court, Oct 2004
13Civil Commitment
- Kansas v Hendricks (1997)
- Confinement to Mental Institution
- Dangerousness without Mental Illness
- Judge or Jury Decision
- Substantial Probability of engaging in sexually
violent acts - Beyond Reasonable Doubt
14Treatment Programs in NSW
- Custody Based Treatment Programs
- DCS Psychology
- Based on risk assessment on Static 99
- CUBIT and others
- Relapse prevention
- Community Based Treatment
- DCS Psychology
- Others
15SOTEP
- 1985
- Sex Offender Treatment and Evaluation Project
- California
- Sentenced Prisoners
- Rape
- Child Molestation
16Eligible Participants
- Inclusion Criteria
- Within 14 to 30 months of release
- Between 18 and 60
- No more than 2 prior convictions
- Admit committing their offence(s)
- No pending warrants
- IQ above 80
- Speak English
- No psychotic or organic mental disorder
- Not medically debilitated
- No prison management problems
- Exclusion Criteria
- Gang Rapists
- Biological Incest Only
173 Groups
- Volunteer Group
- Treatment Group
- Volunteer Control Group
- Non Volunteer Group
- Non Volunteer Control Group
18Treatment
- Relapse Prevention
- CBT
- Atascadero State Hospital
- 2 years
- 40 50 hours per week
- Sex Offender Aftercare Program
- 1 year
19Published
- 1994, Behaviour Research and Therapy
- Omitted treatment Drop Outs
- 1994, Criminal Justice and Behaviour
- Included Treatment Drop Outs
- Not cited by Cochrane
- 1999, Journal of Interpersonal Violence
20Statistical Significance
- Treatment subjects showed lower risk for new sex
offences than did Volunteers only - Higher rate of sex re-offences for Ex-treatment
group compared to Completed Treatment Group - For Child Molesters Treatment Group at lower
risk for violent offences than was the Volunteer
Control Group only - The married men in the treatment group had a
lower risk of sex re-offence only against the
NonVolunteer Control Group
21Negative Findings - Overall
- Volunteer Controls did better than the Treatment
Group in terms of sex re-offending - Treatment Group had the highest rate of violent
re-offending
22Negative Findings - Rapists
- Non Volunteer Control Rapists had the lowest risk
of sex re-offending - Treated Rapists had the highest rate of violent
re-offending
23Negative Findings - Child Molesters
- Treated Child Molesters re-offended at a higher
rate than Volunteer Controls - If married men did better with treatment, single
men did much worse
24NSW
- As no evidence that Relapse Prevention
significantly reduces risk of sexual recidivism - ?Appropriateness of tailoring prison sentence to
accommodate completion of such treatment program - ?Appropriateness of delaying parole to complete
program
25Other Psychological Treatments
- Community Based
- Supervision
- CBT
- Relapse Prevention
- Psychological treatments in combination with
Psychotrophic Medication in selected individuals
26Psychopharmacological treatments
- In selected patients with paraphilias
27Castration
- USA
- Chemical and Surgical
- 9 States
- Voluntary and Mandatory
28NSW
- Call to castrate child sex offenders
- Opposition justice spokesperson
- ?Condition of parole
- ?Mandatory
29France
- Justice Minister
- 2 year trial
- Leuproreline and Cyproterone Acetate
- Voluntary
- 48 repeat offenders
- Denmark,Sweden,Canada
30Psychiatric Treatment
- Appropriate patient populations
- Paraphilias v Sex Offences
- DSM IV TR
- Efficacy
- Tolerability
- Best available option
- Consent
31Consent to Treatment
- Involuntary
- Guardianship Tribunal
- Mental Health Acts
- ?Mandatory Treatment
- Risk/Benefit
- Evidence Base
32What is the medical evidence?
33Evidence
- Animal Husbandry
- Eunuchs and Castrati
- Surgical Castration Studies
- Voluntary and Involuntary
- Testosterone and Sexual Behaviour in Men
- Testosterone Lowering Medications
- Antipsychotics and Antidepressants
34Surgical Castration
Study Follow up Period (Years) Number of Subjects Pre-op rate of recidivism () Post-op rate of recidivism () Comparison group rate of recidivism ()
Germany, Langeluddeke, 1963 Up to 20 1036 84 2.3 39
Switzerland, Cornu, 1973 5 127 77 7.4 4.1 66 - 52
Norway, Bremer, 1959 1 - 10 215 58 2.9 - 7 -
Denmark, Sands, 1964 Up to 30 738 - 1.4 2.4 9.7
35Medication(Chemical Control)
- Oestrogens
- Progestogens
- Medroxy Progesterone Acetate (MPA), Provera
- Anti-androgens
- Cyproterone Acetate (CPA), Androcur
- Flutamide
- Nilutamide
- SSRIs
- Others
36Medication(Chemical Control)
- GNRH agonists
- Triptorelin
- LHRH Agonists
- Leuprolide acetate
- Goserelin
37Therapeutic Trials
- Methodological Problems
- Heterogenous Groups
- Small Sample Sizes
- Single Case Studies
- Double blind/Placebo controlled
- Drop Outs
- Self Report
- Follow up periods
38CPA
- Bradford and Pawlak, 1993
- Double-blind placebo crossover trial
- Superior to placebo
- Self Report and physiological measures
- Some preferential targeting of deviant fantasies
- Cooper, 1992
- MPA and CPA equally effective in double
blind-placebo controlled comparison
39GNRH/LHRH Analogues
- 4 case reports, 1 case control study
- 7 open uncontrolled studies
- 1 study comparing with CPA
- Rosler and Witztum, 1998
- Triptorelin
- Observational, uncontrolled study
- 30 paraphiliacs over 42 months
40SSRIs
- Case Reports
- Small open label studies
- 50-90 response rates