Rockwood Psychological Services - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 81
About This Presentation
Title:

Rockwood Psychological Services

Description:

Hated school therefore will hate therapy. Resistance in Sexual Offenders. HMPS ... Instilling the expectation in the client that therapy will be beneficial ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:98
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 82
Provided by: liamma
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Rockwood Psychological Services


1
Rockwood Psychological Services
Motivational Preparatory Program
  • Liam Marshall
  • www.rockwoodpsyc.com

2
Others who have contributed to this presentation
  • Bill Marshall
  • Bruce Malcolm
  • Yolanda Fernandez
  • Geris Serran
  • Heather Moulden
  • Jean Webber
  • Rose Spicer
  • Jen Sparks

3
Introduction
  • Rationale
  • Outcome
  • Program description
  • Implementation
  • Introductory session
  • Disclosure

4
Major Outcome Analysis
  • Hanson et al, 2002
  • Methodological Requirements
  • Matched comparison untreated group
  • Official recidivism index
  • 43 Studies
  • 9,000 offenders

5
OVERALL OUTCOME FROM 43 INTERNATIONAL TREATMENT
PROGRAMS (Hanson, et al., 2002)
6
Outcome Determinants
  • Refusers
  • Dropouts
  • Completes treatment
  • Gets it

7
GOVERING PRINCIPLES OF TREATMENT
  • Risk Allocate resources (treatment, release,
    and community supervision) differentially to
    high, moderate low-risk offenders
  • Needs Target in treatment empirically
    established criminogenic needs
  • Responsivity
  • General
  • learning style and ability of clients
  • culture
  • process issues (i.e., therapist characteristics,
    clients perceptions, and therapist-client
    relationship
  • environment of treatment-physical and personal
  • Specific
  • attitudinal style of individual client
  • clients world view
  • day-to-day fluctuations in individuals

8
Rationale for a Pretreatment Program
  • Behaviour change more likely when
  • Desire to change
  • Belief that treatment will be beneficial
  • Knowledge of how to change

9
Rationale for a Pretreatment Program
  • Evidence from Pretreatment Programs in other
    areas of Psychology
  • Realistic expectations
  • Self-disclosure
  • Self-exploratory talk
  • Participation
  • Motivation

10
Resistance in Sexual Offenders
  • Desire to continue behaviour for same reason it
    originally occurred
  • Protect view of self
  • Reaction to views of others E.g., police,
    courts, assessments
  • Beliefs that change is not beneficial
  • Belief that change is too difficult or impossible
  • Beliefs about the efficacy of treatment media,
    other offenders, prison staff, friends and
    relatives

11
Resistance in Sexual Offenders
  • Lack of hope for future
  • Previous bad experience with professionals
  • Denial of a problem one-off event
  • Concern about feeling worse
  • Feeling alienated from others
  • Fearing animosity
  • Concern for loss of supports
  • Concern over having to talk about private issues
    in public
  • Hated school therefore will hate therapy

12
Resistance in Sexual Offenders
  • HMPS - Mann Webster
  • 3 Groups
  • Admit Enter Treatment
  • Deny Refuse Treatment
  • Admit Refuse treatment
  • Conducted Interviews

13
Treatment refusal rates
  • Across all areas of medicine, including
    psychotherapy, between 1/3 and 1/2 of patients do
    not comply with the treatment that is recommended
    or prescribed to them (Melamed Szor, 1999).
  • Sex offender treatment refusal rates in HMPS
    treatment establishments averaged 52, range
    between 8 and 76.

14
Resistance in Sexual Offenders
  • System Factors
  • Lack of trust in professionals
  • Bad experiences
  • System undermines treatment
  • Courtesy of HMPS (Mann et al, 2001)

15
Resistance in Sexual Offenders
  • Psychological characteristics
  • Reactance to pressure to enter treatment
  • Lack of insight into own problems
  • Future-focused coping style absent in refusers
  • Courtesy of HMPS (Mann et al, 2001)

16
Resistance in Sexual Offenders
  • Social and family system
  • Cultural issues
  • Refusers concerned about lack of sensitivity to
    cultural issues
  • Family factors
  • Refusers family more likely to believe offender
    is innocent
  • Courtesy of HMPS (Mann et al, 2001)

17
Resistance in Sexual Offenders
  • Treatment beliefs and knowledge
  • Effectiveness
  • Side effects
  • Previous bad experience
  • Stigmatization
  • More than half of refusers expressed a desire to
    enter treatment that has a broader aim than
    addressing offending only
  • Courtesy of HMPS (Mann et al, 2001)

18
Conclusions - Mann et al, 2001
  • A significant proportion of resistance could be
    reduced by some simple strategies.
  • E.g.,
  • Provision of information about treatment
  • Focus on building rapport and trust
  • Involve and inform non-treatment staff
  • Establish Therapeutic Alliance

19
Treatment Attrition Proulx et al, 2004
  • N284, Prison, Psychiatric, Outpatient
  • Noncompleters
  • Institution 18.1
  • Outpatient 38.3

20
Treatment Attrition Proulx et al, 2004
  • Assessed pre treatment
  • Personality MMPI, RSQ
  • Empathy, Self-esteem, Coping, Social
    Desirability, Intimacy, Fear
  • Affective Hostility, Anxiety, Depression
  • Cognitive Rape myth Molest scales, Blame
    attribution
  • During treatment
  • Stages of change, Therapeutic Alliance, Moos

21
Treatment Attrition Proulx et al, 2004
  • Pre treatment variables associated with attrition
  • Empathy, antisociality, OCD, alcoholism, SSE
  • Coping style distraction, coping using sex
  • Treatment factors
  • Therapeutic alliance commitment, working
    capacity
  • Family environment conflict
  • Group environment control

22
Preparatory Program
  • Outcome

23
Preparatory Program Outcome
  • Psychological Targets
  • Readiness for Change
  • Self-Efficacy
  • Hope
  • System Targets
  • Movement through system
  • Resources
  • Returns to Custody and Recidivism

24
Preparatory Program OutcomePychological Targets
25
Preparatory Program OutcomePychological Targets
26
Preparatory Program Outcome
  • N 188 Treated Sexual Offenders
  • Mean time on release 3.06 years
  • Sample Matched for
  • Age at assessment
  • Date of assessment
  • Length of sentence
  • Risk assessment scores
  • Victim characteristics
  • Phallometrically assessed deviance

27
Preparatory Program Outcome
  • Offenders differ on
  • Short-term differences
  • Assigned program intensity
  • Institutional placement
  • Long-term differences
  • Recidivism
  • Return to custody
  • Any recidivism
  • Violent recidivism
  • Sexual recidivism

28
Matching Variables by Groups
29
Victim Characteristics by Groups
30
Risk for Re-offence Deviant Sexual Arousalby
Groups
31
Subsequent Program Levelby Groups
32
Subsequent Security Levelby Groups
33
Type of Release from Custody by Groups
34
Recidivisimby Groups
35
Preparatory Program
  • Program description

36
PREPARATORY PROGRAM
  • AIMS
  • 1. Rehabilitation rather than punishment
  • 2. Instil hope for the future
  • 3. Become accustomed to group work
  • 4. Become more comfortable/open about offence
  • 5. Begin to identify victim harm

37
PREPARATORY PROGRAM
  • AIMS
  • 6. Begin to identify reasons for offending
  • - Why did you offend?
  • - How did you give yourself permission?
  • - How did you get access to victim?
  • - How did you get the victim to cooperate?
  • 7. Enhance motivation for treatment
  • - Precontemplation
  • - Contemplation
  • - Action
  • - Maintenance

38
MAU Preparatory Program
  • Description Began 1997
  • 2½ hours per day, 2 times per week
  • 6-8 weeks duration or until transferred
  • 6-8 Sexual Offenders in group
  • Open-ended (rolling)
  • Cognitive-Behavioral Orientation
  • Motivational

39
MAU Preparatory Program
  • Offenders
  • 300 Sexual Offenders
  • All risk levels
  • Mixture of first-time, recidivist, and historical
    offenders
  • Minimum sentence 2 yrs, Maximum Life/DO
  • Exclusionary Criteria Appeal of Conviction or
    Categorical Denial

40
Millhaven Preparatory Program
  • Content
  • orientation to treatment and assessment
  • orientation to pen placement and treatment
    intensity
  • orientation to risk
  • identification of treatment goals

41
Preparatory Program Content
  • Pretreatment Interview
  • Treatment
  • Introduction to Treatment
  • Disclosure
  • Life History
  • Non Specific Victim Empathy
  • Four Stages of Offending
  • Why did you want to offend?
  • What did you say to yourself to make it seem
    okay?
  • How did you get an opportunity to offend?
  • How did you get your victim to cooperate

42
Other Program Targets
  • Self-esteem
  • Loneliness
  • Jealousy
  • Coping Mood Management
  • Intimacy Attachment
  • Outside Issues

43
Opening Session
  • Strictly informational
  • Group rules confidentiality, supportive
    challenges, attendance,
  • orientation to treatment and assessment
  • orientation to pen placement and treatment
    intensity
  • orientation to risk

44
Initial Disclosure
  • Not challenged - can repeat disclosure later
    after alliance built
  • Support and reward positives
  • Ignore problematic statements
  • Memory method

45
Autobiography
  • Ask for clarification and expansion dont
    challenge his version

46
Victim Empathy
  • Exercise List possible effects to victims of SA
    Long-Term Short-Term.
  • Benefit
  • Non-specific victim is less threatening
  • Enables offender to consider effects in different
    areas some of which may not be overt

47
Preparatory Program
  • Implementation

48
Open-Ended Groups
  • Has no predetermined start or completion date
  • As group members finish all treatment
    requirements new members are added
  • All offenders complete the same components, but
    at different times
  • The component any one group member is working on
    depends on how far along that individual is in
    treatment.

49
Features of an Open-Ended Program
  • Flexibility Can enhance learning with optional
    assignments
  • Therapists have more decision making
    responsibility.
  • High reliance on group process
  • High reliance on therapeutic alliance

50
Benefits of open-ended groups
  • For Therapists
  • Less chance of burnout
  • Ability to roll in and out of group
  • Experienced group members assist in challenging
    newer clients
  • Greater flexibility to deal with issues
  • outside issues

51
Benefits of open-ended groups
  • For Clients
  • Repeated exposure to exercises spaced enough to
    avoid burnout
  • Clients move at their own pace
  • High functioning clients can move quickly
  • Lower functioning clients do not feel pressured
    or inadequate
  • Senior group members get opportunity to nurture
    new members

52
Benefits of open-ended groups
  • For System
  • Can increase number of graduates
  • Flexibility to deal with special cases
  • Soon to be released
  • Stabilization
  • Lower burnout retention of experienced
    therapists

53
Keys to running an open-ended group
  • flexibility, flexibility and flexibility
  • the ability to think on your feet
  • an abundance of good therapist qualities
  • understanding that everything that happens in the
    group provides an opportunity for learning
  • willingness to hand some of the control over to
    the group as a whole

54
Therapists in therapy
  • What does the research show?

55
Positive therapist features
  • An ability to create an appropriate alliance with
    the client
  • Ability to generate a belief in the possibility
    of change
  • Providing opportunities for learning
  • Instilling the expectation in the client that
    therapy will be beneficial
  • Emotionally engaging clients

56
Therapist Interpersonal Characteristics
  • Empathy
  • Genuineness
  • Warmth
  • Support
  • Confidence
  • Emotional responsivity

57
Therapist Interpersonal Characteristics
  • Open-ended questioning
  • Directiveness
  • Flexibility
  • Encouraging active participation
  • Rewarding
  • Respectful
  • Humour

58
Features That Impede Change
  • Confrontational behaviour
  • Rejection of the client
  • Low levels of interpersonal skills
  • Lack of interest in the client
  • Manipulation of client for therapist needs
  • Anger and hostility

59
Confrontation
  • Particularly damaging to clients with low
    self-esteem.
  • Associated with noncompliance in treatment.
  • Clients react by
  • discrediting or challenging therapist
  • devaluing the issue
  • agreeing on surface but dismissing the relevance
    of the issue
  • (Annis Chan, 1983 Patterson Forgatch, 1985
    Cormier Cormier, 1991)

60
Clients perceptions of the therapist
  • Greater treatment benefits generated by
    therapists who are perceived as
  • Confident
  • Involved
  • Focused
  • Emotionally engaged
  • Have positive feelings toward the client
  • Directive
  • Persuasive
  • Sincere

61
Therapeutic Alliance/Atmosphere
  • therapists interpersonal characteristics and
    techniques clients perceptions of the
    therapist
  • Key component collaboration
  • Strict adherence to treatment manuals without
    establishing a good therapeutic alliance is not
    effective.
  • Ratings of the therapeutic alliance have been
    shown to predict dropouts from treatment.

62
Therapeutic Process in the Treatment of Sexual
Offenders
63
CLIENTS PERSPECTIVE (Drapeau, 2005)
  • 1. See therapist as crucial but also see value
    of procedures
  • 2. Base judgments of quality of the program on
    the skills of the therapist
  • 3. Good therapists are seen as honest,
    respectful, nonjudgmental, available, caring,
    confident, competent, and persuasive
  • 4. Good therapists encourage discussion, listen,
    display leadership and strength, and maintain
    order
  • 5. Do not respond to therapists who are
    critical, devaluing, or confrontational
  • 6. Many clients who do well say they are able to
    re-enact aspects, with the therapist, of their
    past reactivation of attachment schemas with
    the therapist
  • 7. Most prevalent interpersonal interactions
    involve therapist supportively challenging the
    clients in a caring manner
  • 8. Clients desire to participate in decision
    making (work collaboratively) and they wish to
    attain mastery and feel competent

64
GROUP CLIMATE(Beech Fordham, 1997 Beech
Hamilton-Giachritis, 2005)
  • Used Moos (1986) Group Environment Scale 10
    subscales
  • Pre to post-treatment changes produced a
    composite score to identify magnitude of
    treatment-induced gains
  • Two of Moos subscales (Cohesion and
    Expressiveness) were significantly related to the
    composite measure of treatment gains
  • - Cohesion includes involvement, participation,
    commitment to the group, and concern and
    friendship for each other
  • - Expressiveness measures the encouragement of
    freedom of action and the expression of feelings

65
EMOTIONAL EXPRESSION AND MASTERY (Pfäfflin et
al., 2005)
  • Expressions of understanding (mastery) of the
    relevant issues appear first in treatment
  • Emotional expression emerges later in treatment
  • When emotional expressions first appear, mastery
    statements are reduced
  • When emotional expression and mastery statements
    appear together, changes begin to occur quite
    rapidly

66
Marshall, Serran et al., 2001
  • Examined therapist features and their
    relationship to client changes in sexual offender
    treatment.
  • Videotaped sessions rated and then related to
    pre-post treatment changes.

67
Therapist features that were related to
significant treatment - induced changes
  • Warmth
  • Empathy
  • Rewarding
  • Directive

68
Results of regression analyses
69
Treatment strategies
70
Treatment Strategies
  • Three approaches have typically been used
  • a) Confrontational approach
  • b) Unchallenging approach
  • c) Motivational approach

71
7 Principles of effective therapy
  • Encourage interaction
  • Develop reciprocity cooperation among groups
    members
  • Use active learning
  • Give feedback
  • Emphasize out of group practise
  • Communicate expectations
  • Respect diverse talents ways of changing
  • (adapted from Chickering Gamson, 1994)

72
How do I overcome resistance?
  • Starts with interview
  • Vocabulary
  • Collaboration
  • Information
  • Confidence Reflection
  • Face saving ways to change
  • Patience

73
How can I overcome resistance?
  • Accept small steps
  • Have an agenda but be flexible
  • Give them something to look at
  • Give them some work to do
  • Dont take or let them take notes
  • Ask for questions
  • Allow them to be the expert
  • Have fun
  • Be responsive ask for and accept feedback
  • Include whole group

74
Adult learning
  • After 15 minutes attention fades
  • How to increase attention
  • Increase importance of information
  • Novelty Variety
  • Increase demands on group members
  • How to retain gains
  • Active use of skills

75
Interview Resistance
  • Appeal
  • Denial
  • Memory deficit
  • Fear of Identification
  • Want to think about it
  • Innocent but want treatment anyway

76
Reducing Resistance The Interview
  • Probe for treatment readiness informs treatment
    goals
  • Probe to find out how much offender knows about
    treatment resistance may be due to uncertainty

77
Interview II
  • Try to get offender to take responsibility for
    entering treatment
  • Outline benefits of participating and
    consequences of not participating
  • Lay out group rules attendance, confidentiality,
    participation

78
How to Increase Group Discussion Feedback
  • Giving Feedback
  • Think about what you want to say before you say
    it
  • Direct your feedback to the person (Maintain eye
    contact, address the person)
  • Observe your tone of voice and body language
    (angry/passive)
  • Do challenge appropriately by identifying issues
    rather than attacking and blaming
  • Do Not attack or blame Dont be a bully! This
    may feel satisfying but is not useful
  • Stay on track
  • Be specific Focus on specific points or
    behaviours rather than digressing or dwelling on
    the past
  • Do give positive feedback
  • Do challenge when necessary
  • Use I statements rather than you statements
  • Notice the response of the other person and learn!

79
How to Increase Group Discussion Feedback
  • Receiving Feedback
  • Listen and Hear what is being said Do not
    assume you know what the other person is going to
    say, so wait to respond until you hear what has
    been said
  • Do not interrupt or talk over
  • Make sure you understand what has been said
    clarify the feedback and if you dont understand,
    ask!
  • If you feel emotional about the feedback, it may
    be better to reflect on it after the session
    before saying anything
  • If you receive similar feedback from more than
    one person, it usually means that people are
    noticing something important about you

80
How to Increase Group Discussion Feedback
  • Applying Feedback
  • It might be helpful to make note of important
    feedback
  • Ask trusted people how you can make the required
    changes
  • Ask people to let you know when you are engaging
    in the desired/undesired ways of behaving
  • Practice changes each day

81
How to Increase Group Discussion Feedback
  • When Feeling Frustrated At times we feel
    frustrated when giving feedback to others. It
    might be necessary to
  • Repeat ourselves
  • Challenge our own expectations
  • Recognize that somebody may not want to change
  • Change the way we are coming across everyone
    responds differently
  • Remind yourself that your responsibility is to
    give feedback, not make somebody accept it!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com