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Κεντρική σελίδα > Συνέδρια > 8th International Conference of (IATSO)
1o Πανελλήνιο Συνέδριο της Ε.Ε.Μ.Π.Σ.Κ > Presentations > WED, Oct 6 \ 14.30-16.30 \ Risk Assessment, II
WED, Oct 6 \ 17.00-19.00 \ Risk Assessment, II010 Leam A Craig The predictive accuracy of the newly developed risk measures Risk Matrix 2000 Sexual/Violence (RMS, RMV) were cross validated and compared with four risk scales (RRASOR, SACJ-Min, SVR-20, and Static-99) in a sample of sexual (n = 85), violent (n = 46), and general (n = 22) offenders. The sexual offence reconviction rate for the sex offender group was 18% at 10 years follow-up, compared with 2% for the violent offenders. Survival analyses revealed the violent offenders were reconvicted at twice the rate of any other group. Reconviction data were analyzed using the area under the curve (AUC) of the Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC). The RMV significantly predicted violent recidivism in the sex and combined sex/violent offender groups. Although the RMS obtained marginal accuracy in predicting sexual reconviction, none of the scales significantly predicted sexual reconviction. An item analysis revealed four factors not included in the risk scales significantly correlated with sexual and violent reconviction. Combining these factors with Static-99, RMV and RMS increased the accuracy in predicting sexual reconviction. 011 Thomas Ross, A large scale international project involving parallel, complementary interventions in three EU countries and an associate country (Germany, The Netherlands, United Kingdom, and Norway) is presented. The aim is to develop a unified approach to assessment of social risk and related behaviours in (sexual) offender groups using the Behavioural Status Index (BEST-Index) and a set of cross-validating instruments (HCR-20; PCL-R, SCL-90-R; BDHI-D). Important elements of the project are improvement of carer assessments; development of offender profiles; related care planning and delivery; studies of the change process; and theoretical implications of what works and what doesn´t to prevent further violence. 012 Aaron W. B. Konopasky, Sexual assault causes incalculable injury and harm. As prevention is a by-product of incarceration, it makes sense that length of sentence and percentage of imposed sentence that is actually served be determined in part by the risk of a sexual offender recidivating. 013 Abigail Konopasky, Believing that acceptance of responsibility for offensive behavior is generally positive, sexual offender therapists routinely assess type and level of denial during treatment. Less formal and less thorough than risk assessments that are done both before and, sometimes, after treatment, this intra-therapy judgment of denial often relies on an unarticulated analysis of the content of the patient's verbal acts, e.g., “She came on to me” means that he thinks it wasn't his fault. We argue that this assessment is actually dependent upon the linguistic resources of both the clinician and clients and how they use those resources to construct physical, emotional, and verbal processes. A formal linguistic framework to explicitly analyze these resources in order to reveal clear links between real-world states, client verbalizations, and therapist verbalizations is suggested. A formal linguistic assessment identifies 4 key participant types: a.) the client (and his/her actions), b.) the therapist, c.) the victim(s) (real and potential), and d.) psychopathology or other mental states. A quantitative analysis of these participant types reveals (a) their relative semantic status as Agent of action versus Patient of action, (b) their relative involvement in physical versus emotional versus verbal actions and (c) their relative involvement in indicative versus subjunctive constructions. A qualitative analysis of word co-occurrence patterns reveals each speaker's idealized linguistic model for each participant type. Together, these analyses can illuminate underlying assumptions of denial and treatment progress and offer more explicit ways of measuring change. 014 Douglas P. Boer, Ph.D. As discussed in my first paper, there are academic proponents of actuarial approaches and there are opposing academic proponents of structured clinical methods for the risk assessment of sexual offenders. To date, neither type of approach has convincingly proven superior to the other in terms of assessing the likelihood of future sexual violence. However, these methods do have their unique strengths and weaknesses, and fortunately, the strengths and weaknesses of each type are largely opposite in nature. As a result, a convergent approach in which both types of instruments are used in a combined manner may serve both the offender and public interest best. A series of common-sense rules to help communicate risk estimates will be provided that may aid clinicians when faced with explaining findings from several instruments of different methodological natures. |