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“No More Victims” State Probation Service of Latvia Conference @ Riga 15 – 17 th March 2011. Changing Behaviour of Sex Offenders: Treatment Programmes Dawn Fisher and Elizabeth Hayes . Summary. Importance of programmes in Criminal Justice provision
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“No More Victims”State Probation Service of Latvia Conference @ Riga 15 – 17th March 2011 Changing Behaviour of Sex Offenders: Treatment Programmes Dawn Fisher and Elizabeth Hayes
Summary • Importance of programmes in Criminal Justice provision • What works - principles underlying effective programmes • Programmes overview • Interaction between custody and community treatment settings • New treatment approaches
Sex Offenders in the Criminal Justice System • Significant percentage of offenders i.e. 80,000 prisoners in English & Welsh prison system of which 6,000 are sexual offenders (13%) • Registered sex offenders in 2005/6 was 58 per 100,000 of the population in England Wales • Reconviction rates vary according to type of offence and level of risk deviancy i.e. RM2000: • Risk category –Very high – 60% High - 40.5% Medium - 18.1% Low - 8%
Importance of treatment in Criminal Justice systems • Public protection and risk management • Reducing the occurrence, severity and frequency of sexual offending • Rehabilitation • Restorative justice
CJS Strategy in England & Wales • Prison and probation treatment programmes from 1990s onwards • Advisory panel - later became accreditation panel • Influence of ‘what works’ literature – 1998 – ‘what works for probation’
Accreditation Criteria • A Clear Model of Change • Selection of Offenders • Targeting a Range of Dynamic Risk Factors • Effective Methods • Skills Oriented • Sequencing Intensity and Duration • Engagement and Motivation • Continuity of Programmes and Services • Maintaining Integrity • Ongoing Evaluation
Underlying principles - What Works Meta analysis (Hanson2002, Losel & Schmucker 2005, 2010) • Risk-Need-Responsivity • Cognitive Behavioural and Social Learning Theory • Skills based - generalisation and maintenance • Manualised • Trained and supported staff • Quality assured • Evaluated and monitored
Risk Principle – who to treat? • Sexual offending treatment is prioritised for those who are at higher risk of re-offending. • The higher the risk, the greater the ‘dose’ of treatment. • Programmes have the most impact on high risk offenders and least impact on low risk offenders.
Need Principle – what to treat? • Treatment should focus on issues that that have been shown to raise risk of future offending. • These are called Dynamic Risk Factors or Criminogenic Needs, i.e. significant causal factors.
Responsivity Principle – how to treat? • Structured, cognitive behavioural approach with strong emphasis on collaborative enquiry and active skill-building. • Motivational, conveying hope for the future. Emphasis on a constructive approach to future, rather than creating stigmatising shame about the past. • Warm, empathic, reinforcing and directive therapist style. • Adaptations for special needs, e.g. intellectual disabilities, personality disorders, mental health issues. • Purposeful eclecticism, adapting and using methods and techniques as appropriate to the offender and his learning style. ‘Finding the shoe that fits.’
Treatment Methods Principally CBT plus elements of Social Learning Theory • Self-analysis and cognitive restructuring • Modelling of alternative thinking/behaviour • Implementation of alternative thinking/behaviour • Modeling of anti-criminal attitudes/behaviours • Skills development
Factors Targeted in Treatment Programmes • Cognitive support for offending • Deviant sexual interests, arousal patterns, sexual preoccupation • Difficulty in recognising personally relevant risk factors • Difficulty in generating or enacting appropriate coping strategies • Deficits in interpersonal, self-management or problem solving skills to cope with personally relevant risk factors • Social support for sexual offending
Acquisition of Skills to Deal With: • Inappropriate sexual preferences • Offence supportive attitudes • Overcoming intimacy deficits i.e. elevated emotional loneliness; relationship skills; insecure attachments • Management of emotions • Sexual preoccupation (to reduce where preoccupation sustains the offending) • Maintaining change
Successfully delivered programmes require • Skilled and enthusiastic group facilitators • Good communication - case managers and programme facilitators • Committed case management • Effective PSR authors • Good communication - workers and supervisors • Quality Control and Quality Assurance issues addressed • Programme providers supported • Programmes monitored and evaluated • Quality Control and Quality Assurance issues addressed • Programmes integrated within overall Probation supervision activity
Therapist behaviors that enhance treatment effectiveness • Empathic, genuine, warm, respectful, supportive, self disclosing • Asks open ended questions, directive, flexible, encourages participation, rewarding, use of humor • Attentive, confident, trustworthy, instills positive expectations, emotionally responsive
Therapist behaviors that reduce treatment effectiveness • Aggressive confrontation, rejection, manipulation of patient, low interest, critical, sarcastic, hostile/angry • Discomfort with silences, unresponsive, dishonest, judgmental, authoritarian, defensive • Need to be liked, nervous, does not wait for answers, boundary problems, rigidity, coldness
Range of Programmes • Prison – CORE 2000, Extended, Adapted, Rolling Programme, Healthy Sexual Functioning • Probation – TVSOG, N-SOG, C-SOG, Internet programme • All programmes currently under review
TVSOGP Statement of Purpose To reduce risk of re-offending by: • Targeting offenders based on their risk, treatment needs and responsivity needs. • Increasing offenders opportunity of leading a more fulfilling life, meeting needs by pro-social means.
DENIAL Cognitive Distortions Sexual Arousal Lack of Victim Empathy OFFENCE SPECIFIC PROBLEMS LEVEL OF SOCIALADEQUACY Self esteem Assertiveness Intimacy Problem Solving Self Management KNOWLEDGE OF RELAPSE SUCCESSFUL TREATMENT Model of Change (based on original concept by Fisher & Beech)
Eligibility • Age = 18+ • I.Q. = 80 plus • Mental Health - stabilised 6 months • Substance abuse stabilised • Some acceptance of his conviction • Recognition of need to change behaviour • Willingness to participate in group-work • Language requirement • NB – Literacy deficits do not exclude
The Change Process Foundation Block Taking responsibility for offending Reduction in denial Foundation Block & throughout programme Addressing distortions Pro-offending thinking patterns Cognitive Restructuring Victim empathy Block Enhancing victim empathy Life Skills, RP & skills rehearsal Problem Solving, coping, strategies, relationship skills, conflict resolution Addressing deficits in socio-affective functioning Life Skills & Relapse Prevention Identify & manage difficult situations, impulsivity, links to offence triggers Addressing problems of self management Develop/practice skills for positive lifestyle, risk management, support networks, keep safe plans Better Lives Relapse Prevention Block
TVSOGP • Sex offenders are heterogeneous so programme has to meet individual needs as far as possible – thus divided into blocks which can be attended/repeated as required i.e. offender requiring RP/maintenance can attend Better lives section • Pre-post treatment evaluation to identify treatment needs and evaluate change
Programme Structure Foundation Block 10 day programme Monday – Friday 9.30am – 5.00pm x 2 weeks Total group time = 60 hours
MODULE CONTENTS • 1 Establishing the group 1 • 2 Link between thoughts, feelings 2 • and behaviours • 3 Sexual thoughts Finkelhor’s Preconditions • 4 Model • 5 Routes to offending • 6 Deciding to offend • 7 Consequences of offending 8 • 8 Making change possible 8-9 • 9 Progress review and planning 10 • for the future 25
Victim Empathy Block Twice Weekly Sessions 8 sessions X 2 hrs, Follow on from Foundation Block Total group time =16 hours
SESSIONS • 1 Introduction to Empathy • 2 Perspective Taking (Letter to Victim) • 3 The extent of victimisation • 4 The effects of sexual abuse • 5 Understanding the victims’ behaviour • 6 Victim perspective role-plays • 7 Victims’ Questions • 8 Letter to victim (not to be sent) 27
Life Skills Block Twice weekly sessions 20 sessions – 2 hours duration Total group time = 40 hours
OUTLINE OF LIFE SKILLS BLOCK • SESSIONS 1 - 2 • Self Image • SESSIONS 3 - 6 • Positive thinking & Problem Solving • SESSIONS 7 - 16 • Interpersonal Skills • SESSIONS 17 - 19 • Problems arising in intimate relationships • SESSION 20 • Bringing it all together 29
Relapse Prevention ‘Better Lives’ Block One session per week 22 sessions - 2 hours duration Total group time = 44 hours NB: if the group is larger than 8 offenders, up to 4 extra sessions will be added
Modules of ‘Better lives’ block • Familiarisation with the ‘Better Lives’ Model • Identifying risk factors • Coping strategies • Keep-safe Plan & Time Planning • Guest Speaker • Development of individual treatment targets • Skills practice • Addressing Dynamic Risk Domains • ‘Bringing it all together’ • Develop Good Life & Keep-safe Plans • Presentations to Offender Managers, who attend the last session 31
Substantial Emphasis on Training and Supervision (particularly important when moving to scale) • Staff to demonstrate required competence prior to acceptance into training • Training is assessed, staff to demonstrate required competence on training • Supervision ongoing for staff skills and support and to maintain programme integrity
Quality Assurance Treatment Management Supervision and video monitoring To protect • Programme integrity To prevent • Programme drift, reversal, non-compliance To promote • Treatment style
Quality Assurance Audit • All programmes audited for compliance and clinical quality • Programmes designed to have auditable products
Audit Criteria Compliance • is the programme being managed properly • is the programme being delivered as designed with the right length of treatment (dose), frequency, length of session, size of group, number of facilitators Clinical audit • looks at the quality of delivery • 20 factors, under 4 headings: adherence to manuals treatment style group work delivery skills responsivity
Evaluation and Monitoring Psychometrics • Used to determine treatment needs pre-treatment • Used as a measure of progress post-treatment • Used to evaluate programmes
Evaluation and Monitoring Recidivism - reconviction data • desistance • frequency • intensity
Making Changes in Programmes • Role of TM – where a change needs planning outside the group session • Change Control – for substantial changes • Accreditation Panel guidance for the biggest changes – redesign, replacement programmes • Revisions + new programmes
New Treatment Approaches - recent • Reduced focus on denial, offence accounts and ‘cognitive distortions’ • Reconsideration of ‘victim empathy’ • Increased focus on therapist style – ‘who works’ v ‘what works ‘ • Second generation programmes - increased Individualization within a standardised approach • Development of strengths-based approaches i.e. GLM • Enhanced focus on skills training • Increased attention to contextual support, ‘wrap-around’ services
New Treatment Approaches - future • Rethinking victim empathy • Low risk offenders - less treatment, more management • ‘Brain-informed’, reflecting neuro-science developments • Incorporate alternative techniques: mindfulness and self-compassion, non verbal therapies i.e. arts therapies (music, art, drama) • Increased application of desistance theories • Cross-setting versus single strand approaches
Low Risk • Reconviction rate is < 1% over 4 years • Dangers of over-treating • Low risk ≠ no risk • Public expectations + victim’s expectations • Some LRSOs request treatment – ethics? • Exclude LRSOs – message that some sexual crimes are ‘not serious’ • Risk assessment tools apply to groups not individuals • How to assess 10% high risk-low risk
Low Risk Aims • Motivation • Problem Solving • Resettlement • Risk management – especially acute risk factors • Improve cooperation with CJ and other agencies
Challenges for Efficient Programmes • integrity and innovation • Supply versus demand – access to treatment timely and sufficient • Providing for diversity • Staying good, getting better – continuous professional development for treatment staff and organisation • Adaptation to changing environment – political and knowledge base • Targets – inputs, outputs , outcomes • Case management on board • Meeting need managing resources – how to respond to risk and need of those not in treatment • Managing expectations and aspirations
Custody-Community Treatment Interaction Opportunities • Coherence, Continuity, Consistency • Integrated or seamless treatment • ‘Through the gate’ provisions • Programmes in institutions and community combined to enable different doses of treatment, follow-up, ongoing risk management • Joint training and delivery
Custody-Community Treatment Interaction Challenges • Same tools needed for risk & need assessment and common outcome measures • Gaps and duplication in provision • Differing emphases eg. - deniers, refusers - voluntary versus mandated treatment - risk management • Culture, Confidence
Contact details elizabeth.hayes@hacic.co.uk dfisher@standrew.co.uk