Title: Developments in Psychological Assessment
1Developments in Psychological Assessment
Treatment and Management for Adult Offenders with
Developmental Disabilities4th International
Conference on the Care and Treatment of Offenders
with a Learning DisabilityUniversity of Central
Lancashire, PrestonWednesday, 6th April 2005
- Professor John L Taylor
- Northumbria University and
- Northgate Prudhoe NHS Trust
- john2.taylor_at_unn.ac.uk
2 Developments in Psychological Assessment
Treatment and Management for Adult Offenders with
Developmental Disabilities
- Definitions
- Prevalence
- Recidivism
- Risk
- psychometric
- actuarial
- clinical
- (Sex offending)
- (Fire-setting)
- Anger and aggression
- Process issues
- Conclusions
3Acknowledgements
- Dr Bruce Gillmer, Northgate Prudhoe NHS Trust
- Professor Gregory OBrien, Northgate Prudhoe
NHS Trust - Alison Robertson, Northgate Prudhoe NHS Trust
- Ian Thorne, Northgate Prudhoe NHS Trust
- Professor Ray Novaco, University of California,
Irvine, USA - Professor Bill Lindsay, NHS Tayside and The State
Hospital - Dr Todd Hogue, Rampton Hospital
- Dr Sue Johnston, Rampton Hospital
4Key References
- Frankish, P. (Ed.). (2001). Special issue on
people with learning disabilities who offend.
British Journal of Forensic Practice, 3. - Fraser, W.I. Taylor, J.L. (Eds.). (2002).
Forensic learning disabilities The evidence
base. Supplement 1. Journal of Intellectual
Disability Research, 46. - Lindsay, W.R. (Ed.). (2002). Offenders with
intellectual disability. Special issue. Journal
of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities,
15. - Lindsay, W.R., Taylor, J.L. Sturmey, P. (Eds.).
(2004). Offenders with developmental
disabilities. Chichester Wiley. - Lindsay, W.R. Taylor, J.L. (in press). A
selective review of research on offenders with
developmental disabilities Assessment and
treatment. Clinical Psychology Psychotherapy.
5 Prevalence of Offending and People with DD
- Prevalence studies of offending amongst people
with DD report - large variations in rates depending on
- Inclusion criteria used - particularly whether
those with borderline intelligence are included
or not -
- The type of assessment instrument used to detect
DD (e.g. file review vs. standardised IQ
assessment) - Location of the sample - community vs. courts vs.
prisons vs. secure hospital settings - Study design and methodology (e.g. case note
review vs. clinical evaluation vs. informant
survey sampling method) - Changes/differences in criminal justice, social
health care policies affect apparent incidence,
visibility and reporting (e.g. de-institutionalisa
tion Lund, 1990).
6 Prevalence of Offending and People with DD
/contd.
- Prevalence of offending among people with DD is
difficult to estimate with any degree of accuracy
(Lindsay, Taylor Sturmey, 2004) - The evidence base is poor with regard to
epidemiological studies - in particular there is
dearth of well-controlled studies including
comparison reference groups. - (Lindsay Taylor, in press)
- It is not clear, therefore, whether people with
DD are over- or under-represented in the offender
population, and whether offending is more
prevalent among people with ID than the general
population
(Day, 1993 Holland et
al., 2002 Simpson Hogg, 2001)
7 Recidivism Amongst Offenders with DD
- Studies of recidivism amongst offenders with DD
have reported rates between 39 (Walker McCabe,
1973) and 72 (Lund, 1990) - There are major problems in interpreting the
findings of recidivism studies (Lindsay Taylor,
in press) - Recidivism rates for DD offenders subject to
probation orders are high, but no higher than for
offenders in general (Linhorst et al., 2003) - Voluntary clients have markedly higher recidivism
rates than those mandated to community case
management programmes by the courts (Linhorst et
al., 2003) - Longer-term treatment and supervision under
probation orders reduces recidivism of SXO
(Lindsay et al., 1998) - Treated sex offenders followed up over 4 years
showed re-offending rates of 4, 12, 13 and 21
over this period (Lindsay et al., 2002)
8Risk Assessment in Offenders with DD
- 2 recent reviews focusing on risk assessment in
offenders with ID - Johnston (2002) Quinsey (2004)
- A special issue of JARID on risk assessment in
forensic DD (Eds. Lindsay Beail, 2004) - Psychometric Risk Assessment
- Staff-rated risk using the Short Dynamic Risk
Scale (SDRS) is predictive of community
offending-type behaviour, including violence
(Quinsey, 2004) - Fire-setting is closely associated with
antecedents of anger, low social attention and
low mood as measured on the FSAS (Murphy Clare,
1996 Taylor et al., 2002) - Self- and staff-rated anger using the NAS and
WARS is predictive of inpatient violence (Novaco
Taylor, 2004)
9Hierarchical Regression of Violence Risk and
Anger Predictors of Patient Assaultiveness in
HospitalRef Novaco Taylor (2004) in
Psychological Assessment
Predictors beta t R2 R2 Change
F change p Step 1 Age
-.148 1.47 WAIS-R (Full Scale) -.214 2.12 Violen
ce Offence .143 1.45 .081 .081 2.77 (3,95)
.046 Step 2 NAS Total .369 3.95 .211
.131 15.59 (1,91) .000 Step
3 Extraversion (EPQ) .224 2.43 .258 .047
5.90 (1,93) .017 Note The dependent
measure is the number of assaults since hospital
admission (square root transformed). At Step 3,
STAXI Trait Anger and Anger Expression, and the
EPQ-Lie scale were statistically excluded in the
stepwise procedure. For the final model
including the covariates, NAS Total, and EPQ-E, R
.508, F (5,93) 6.48, p .000
10Risk Assessment in Offenders with DD
Actuarial Assessment
- The Applicability of Personality Disorder and
Risk - Assessment (DSPD) Measures in a Sample of
- Intellectual Disability Offenders
- Study funded by the Home Office
- Grant No. RDS/01/247
- Dr Todd Hogue Rampton Hospital
- Dr Sue Johnston Rampton Hospital
- Professor John Taylor Northgate Prudhoe NHS
Trust - Professor Greg OBrien Northgate Prudhoe NHS
Trust - Professor Bill Lindsay NHS Tayside
- Dr Anne Smith NHS Tayside
11Study Participants and Sites
- 212 men with ID/developmental disabilities and
offending and offending-type histories from 3
sites - Rampton Hospital (High Security) N 73
- Northgate Prudhoe Hospitals (Medium Low
Security) N 70 - Tayside (Community Forensic Service) N 69
- Mean Age 37.5 years (SD 11.4 Range 18 69
years) - Mean Full Scale IQ 65.8 (SD 8.6 Range 43
89) - Mean Length of Stay 8.1 years (SD 7.5 Range
1 26 years)
12Risk Instruments
- Violence Risk Appraisal Guide (VRAG Harris, Rice
Quinsey, 1993) - actuarial - Static 99 (Hanson Thornton, 2000) - actuarial
- Risk Matrix 2000 (Thornton, 2000) - actuarial
- Individual Psychological Risk Factor (IPRF
Hogue, 2003) - clinical - Short Dynamic Risk Scale (SDRS Quinsey, 2003)
clinical - HCR-20 (Webster, Eaves, Douglas Wintrup, 1995)
actuarial and clinical
13Results HCR-20 by Site
- Rampton Northgate mean scores were
significantly higher than Tayside on the
Historical scale (F 42.95, df 3, p lt .001) - Rampton mean scores were significantly higher
than Northgate Tayside on the Risk Management
scale (F 3.19, df 3, p lt .05) - There were no differences in mean scores on the
Clinical scale across sites (F 1.56, df 3,
p .20)
14Correlations between HCR-20, other Risk
Measures and Violent/Aggressive Incidents
HCR-20
Historical Clinical
Risk Managt. VRAG
.65 .23
.22 Short Dynamic Risk Scale
.39 .42
.27 Total Incidents
.28
.28 .20 Note. p lt .01. All
correlations are Spearman Rho, two-tailed tests.
N 151 203.
15Correlations between HCR-20 and EPS Scales
HCR-20
Historical Clinical
Risk Managt. EPS Scales Physical
Aggression
.32 .35
.23 Verbal Aggression
.30 .37
.19 Anxiety
.12
.18 .15 Withdrawal
.17 .13
.03 Note. p lt .01. All correlations are
Spearman Rho, two-tailed tests. N 154 171.
16Mean HCR-20 Scores, Grouped According to
Conviction for Violent Offences
17Mean HCR-20 Scores, Grouped According to
Violent/Aggressive Incidents During Previous 12
Months
18Conclusions HCR-20 for Offenders with DD
- HCR-20 scales show good concurrent validity with
conceptually relevant clinical and actuarial risk
measures - The scales have good levels of discriminant
validity, as measured against EPS clinical and
aggressive behaviour indices - HCR-20 scales correlate significantly with
proximal violent incident data - HCR-20 differentiates between clients with
convictions for violence (and those who have been
violent recently) and non-violent clients in a
logically consistent manner
19Risk Assessment in Offenders with DD Treatment
PlanningRef Taylor, J.L. Halstead, S. (2001).
Br. J. of Forensic Practice
- Case Study - Mr L.
- 27 years old
- Admitted from prison under s.47 of the MHA 1983
- Convicted of Indecent Assault reduced from
Attempted Rape - Victim sister-in-law, 13 years old
- Sentence 6 months imprisonment ) reduced on
appeal from 18 months) - Married for 3 years
- Wife, 19 years old
- 1 son, 2 years old
- 1 daughter, 1 year old
- Full Scale IQ 67 Level 2 Social Reasoning
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23Some Conclusions about Forensic-Clinical Risk
AssessmentRef Taylor, J.L. Halstead, S.
(2001). Br. J. of Forensic Practice
- Clinicians tend to avoid systematic risk
assessment - There is a gap between practice and the science
of risk assessment - This results in clients being denied effective
assessments and targeted interventions to reduce
their risks - Use of shared clinical models that allow for risk
analysis is one way forward - This approach could enable the development of
clinically defensible judgements concerning
patients risks - More research and evaluation is required
concerning the implementation of this approach
and its predictive validity
24Sex Offenders and Fire-Setters with DD - Key
References
- Sex Offenders
- Lindsay, W.R. (2002). Research and literature on
sex offenders with intellectual and developmental
disabilities. J. of Intell. Disability Research,
46 (Suppl. 1), 74-85. - Lindsay, W.R. (2004). Sex offenders
conceptualisation of the issues, services,
treatment and management. In Lindsay, Taylor
Sturmey (Eds.), Offenders with developmental
disabilities. Chichester Wiley. - Courtney, J. Rose, J. (2004). The effectiveness
of treatment for male sex offenders with learning
disabilities A review of the literature. Journal
of Sexual Aggression, 10, 215-236. - Fire-Setters
- Taylor, J.L., Thorne, I., Robertson, A. Avery,
G. (2002). Evaluation of a group intervention for
convicted arsonists with mild and borderline
intellectual disabilities. Crim. Behaviour and
Mental Health, 12, 282-293. - Taylor, J.L., Thorne, I. Slavkin, M.L (2004).
Treatment of fire-setting behaviour. In Lindsay,
Taylor Sturmey (Eds.), Offenders with
developmental disabilities. Chichester Wiley.
25Anger Aggression in People with DD
- Aggression is a common feature of populations of
people with DD (Deb et al., 2001 Hill
Bruininks, 1984 Sigafoos et al., 1994 Smith et
al., 1996 Taylor et al., 2004) - Prevalence in the UK DD population is 12-22
(est. 144,000 240,000 individuals) - Physical violence is a significant
clinical/management problem in people with DD and
forensic histories in institutional settings
(Novaco Taylor, 2004) - Aggressive behaviour presents significant
problems for staff in DD services (Bromley
Emerson, 1995 Jenkins et al., 1997 Kiely
Pankhurst, 1998). - Anger is a significant activator of, and is
predictive of violence in psychiatric, forensic
and DD populations (Novaco, 1994 Novaco
Renwick, 2002 Novaco Taylor, 2004)
26Northgate Anger Treatment Project
- Stage 1
- diagnostic/screening assessment of a group of 129
detained DD men with offending histories to
examine the nature and scope of anger problems in
this population and to investigate the
psychometric properties of several criterion
measures of anger and aggression - Stage 2
- development of an anger treatment protocol
designed specifically for people with DD and
histories of aggression and offending behaviour - Stage 3
- evaluation of a cognitive-behavioural anger
treatment by comparison of post-treatment
measures in the treatment group with
pre-treatment measures in the waiting list
control group
27Cognitive-Behavioural Treatment of Anger for
People with DD
- Research on anger treatment for people with DD is
limited, but there is some evidence of successful
CBT-based interventions (see Taylor, 2002
Whitaker, 2001 for reviews) - There are 7 small anger CBT outcome studies with
DD clients that involved comparison groups
(Benson et al., 1986 Lindsay et al., 2004 Rose
et al., 2000, Taylor et al., 2002, 2004, in
press Willner et al., 2002) - There are some reports in the literature of CBT
for anger in offenders with DD (Allen et al.,
2001 Lindsay et al., 2003, 2004 Taylor et al.,
2002, 2004a, in press)
28Three Concatenated Anger Treatment Outcome
Studies - Research Design Analysis
- Wait-list controlled design (as considered
unethical to withhold a potentially effective
treatment from those who might benefit from it) - Both groups continued to receive treatment as
usual - Patients meeting inclusion criteria allocated to
the Anger Treatment (AT) group or Routine Care
(RC) conditions
29 Anger Treatment for ID Offenders I
- Modification of Novacos (1975, 1993) treatment
protocol - Treatment is delivered individually by a
qualified psychologist over 18 sessions (twice
weekly) - 6 session preparatory phase (psycho-educational)
- 12 sessions of treatment proper (cognitive
re-structuring, arousal reduction skills
training) - Emphasises collaboration, personal
responsibility, self-control the legitimacy of
anger - Utilises a range of assessment, educational
training materials adapted to help patients with
LD engage in the treatment process
30 Anger Treatment for ID Offenders II
- Key components of the treatment
- Analysis and formulation of individual patients
particular anger problems - Cognitive re-structuring
- Self-monitoring of anger frequency, intensity and
triggers - Construction of a personal provocation hierarchy
- Arousal reduction techniques
- Training behavioural coping skills
- Development of personalised self-instructions to
prompt coping - Stress inoculation to practice coping in
imagination
31Mean Novaco Anger Scale (NAS) Total scores over
Time ANCOVA (WAIS-R IQ as covariate) F(1,33)
4.74. p lt .05, r .35Ref Taylor et al. (in
press). Brit. J. of Clinical Psychology
32Mean Provocation Inventory Total Scores over
TimeANOVA, F (1,17), 13.56, p lt .005, r
.66Ref Taylor et al. (2002). J. of Applied
Research in Intell. Dis., Vol. 15
33Mean IPT Anger Composite Scores over Time
ANCOVA (Time 1 score as covariate) F(1,14)
11.20. p lt .01, r .67 Ref Taylor et al.
(2004). Clinical Psychol. Psychotherapy, Vol.
11
34Mean WARS Anger Index scores over
TimeANCOVA (WAIS-R IQ as covariate) F(1, 33)
1.49, p lt .23 Ref Taylor et al. (in press).
Brit. J. of Clinical Psychology
35Process Issues Related to Psychotherapy for
People with DD
- Can people with DD reliably engage in the
collaborative, shared formulation approach of
CBT?
36Treatment Completers (n 18) Evaluations of
Preparatory and Treatment Phases of Anger
Treatment (PEAT Questionnaire Responses)
37Patient G - Background Information
- Age 27 years
- Full Scale IQ 68
- Psychiatric Diagnosis Mild Learning Disability
- MHA Section 37 Hospital Order
- Length of stay in hospital 8.5 years
- Index Offence(s) Indecent assaults against
young boys - Rehabilitation Status Longer-stay low secure
(slow-track rehabilitation) - Previous Psychological Intervention 1) Positive
response to an individual behavioral programme to
reduce interpersonal conflict 2) Completion of
group-based sex offender treatment programme with
mixed outcomes
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39Process Issues Related to Psychotherapy for
People with DD
- Can people with DD reliably engage in the
collaborative, shared formulation approach of
CBT? - Can people with DD do the cognitive component of
CBT?
40Cognitive-Behavioural Model of Emotion Simple
Linear
A
B
C
Events
Thoughts
Feelings
Behaviour
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42Process Issues Related to Psychotherapy for
People with DD
- Can people with DD reliably engage in the
collaborative, shared formulation approach of
CBT? - Can people with DD do the cognitive component of
CBT? - What is the effect of IQ on treatment outcome?
- Can treatment effects be achieved and sustained
in routine practice settings?
43Mean NAS Total scores for AT (n 16) and RC (n
20) groups over time.
44Do you think you have learned anything about
anger treatment from your involvement in the
project?(Nurses Responses n 14, Mean 3.7)
45Has your involvement (in the treatment) had an
effect on the way you deal with other patients
anger problems?(Nurses Responses n 14, Mean
3.1 )
46Process Issues Related to Psychotherapy for
People with DD
- Can people with DD reliably engage in the
collaborative, shared formulation approach of
CBT? - Can people with DD do the cognitive component of
CBT? - What is the effect of IQ on treatment outcome?
- Can treatment effects be achieved and sustained
in routine practice settings? - Can treatment effects be maintained over time and
across settings?
47Summary
- It is not clear whether people with DD are over-
or under-represented in the offender population,
and whether offending is more prevalent among
people with ID than the general population - There are major problems in interpreting the
findings of recidivism studies but mandated and
longer-term treatments produce better outcomes - Good progress is being made in developing
psychometric, actuarial and clinical assessments
of forensic risk - The evidence for the effectiveness of
interventions for sexually aggressive and
fire-setting behaviour is building but lacks
methodological rigour - The evidence for anger treatment is best
developed and continues to build the
sustainability and impact on aggression is not
clear - Offenders with DD appear to be able to engage in
and benefit from CBT approaches
48Future Research Directions for Offenders with DD
- More research concerning reliable and valid
assessments is required to facilitate risk
assessment and management, treatment planning,
and evaluation of effectiveness - Larger, more powerful and better designed
controlled trials are required to show if the
effects obtained to date are stable phenomena - The mechanisms underlying treatment gains are
not clear - component analysis and longer-term
follow-up is required to evaluate these issues - Process issues relating to optimum length of
treatment, mode of delivery of treatment (group
vs. individual), systematic involvement of carers
and relative costs need more enquiry - The sustainability and generalisability of
treatment gains are not proven research into
optimum maintenance schedules is indicated
49Contact Details
- Professor John L Taylor
- Head of Psychological Therapies Research
- Northgate Prudhoe NHS Trust
- Northgate Hospital
- Morpeth
- Northumberland
- NE61 3BP
- Tel 01670 394228
- john2.taylor_at_unn.ac.uk