280 likes | 625 Views
Mental Illness and Assessing the Risk of Violence. History Clinical Assessment Empirical Research Actuarial Devices Dynamic and Static Characteristics System Performance Implications. Mental Illness and Assessing the Risk of Violence. Mental illness and violence Serious mental illness and
E N D
1. Mental Illness and Assessing the Risk of Violence Breaking New Barriers
NJAMHA Conference, Princeton
May 7, 2003
Dr. Grant Harris
gharris@mhcp.on.ca
www.mhcp-research.com
2. Mental Illness and Assessing the Risk of Violence History
Clinical Assessment
Empirical Research
Actuarial Devices
Dynamic and Static Characteristics
System Performance
Implications
3. Mental Illness and Assessing the Risk of Violence Mental illness and violence
Serious mental illness and violence
Poverty of clinicians evaluations
Violence cannot be predicted
4. Big (relatively)
objective risk assessment, psychopathy, violent history, juvenile delinquency, separation from parents, childhood aggression, antisocial peers, conduct disorder, alcohol abuse
Medium
nonviolent criminal history, adult criminal history, substance abuse, marital status, antisocial personality, psychotic diagnosis* and some symptoms*, age*
Small
clinical opinion, self esteem, offense seriousness*, IQ*, some psychotic symptoms*
Not: psychological distress, remorse, mood disorder Mental Illness and Assessing the Risk of Violence
5. Development of the VRAG:
618 MDOs, Variables, Predictor Selection,
Definition of Violent Recidivism,
Multivariate Methods, Subgroups,
Weighting System
How Well Does it Work?
Correlation w Speed, Severity of Violence Actuarial Risk Assessment:The Violence Risk Appraisal Guide
6. The Violence Risk Appraisal Guide (VRAG) Psychopathy Checklist Score
Elementary school maladjustment
Age at index offense*
DSM III personality disorder
Separation from parents before age 16
Failure on prior conditional release
History of nonviolent offenses
7. The Violence Risk Appraisal Guide (VRAG) Never married
DSM III schizophrenia*
Victim injury in index offense*
History of alcohol abuse
Male victim in index offense
8. Performance of the VRAG
10. Replications of VRAG/SORAG (n=30)
11. Mental Illness and Assessing the Risk of Violence Violence Risk Appraisal Guide:
Number of violent offenses, speed of violent recidivism, severity of violent recidivism
Severe violence, Short term prediction
Not improved by clinical opinion
BUT... VRAG is designed for who not designed for when
12. Mental Illness and Assessing the Risk of Violence Prospects for dynamic predictors about when
Difference/change scores inherent
Complaints, hostility, unrealistic plans, takes no responsibility
13. Mental Illness and Assessing the Risk of Violence An objective measure of risk to the public
An opportunity to inform assessment, treatment and service planning
Evaluation of system performance
14. Social withdrawal
Poor use of leisure time
Inactivity
Insolence
Anger
Noncompliance
Poor self care
Conversational skill deficit
Nonparticipation in programs
Impulsivity The Ontario Forensic SurveyOak Ridge 1998 -- Common Problems:
17. Risk-related Performance
18. Community Access and Supervision Forensic Clinicians
Services and Risk: r = .17, p < .05
Precautions and Risk: r = .13, p < .05
Review Board
Conditions and Risk: r = -.13, p < .05
What Happens
Conditions and Risk: r = -.07, ns
19. Actuarial Risk Assessment and Forensic Clinical Practice Assessment -- risk related problems
Treatment -- risk related problems
Decision Making -- Formula for Forensic Disposition: Resources, Offense Severity, Time since Index, Recent Behavior, Long Term Behavior, VRAG Score
-> Recommended Placement
20. Oak Ridge - Clinical Problems 1. Assessment Opportunities Criteria: Gaps are big and local; Risk
Sexual knowledge, Community Resources, Reading, Work skills, General knowledge, Unrealistic discharge plans, No remorse, Same delusion as index...
Criminal attitudes, Criminal associates, Sexual misbehaviors, Substance abuse, Threats of harm to specific person
21. Oak Ridge - Clinical Problems 2. Treatment Opportunities Criteria: Problems common & severe; Risk
Social withdrawal, Poor use leisure, Unusual thoughts, Inactivity, Suspicion, Conceptual disorganization, Conversational skills, Poor self care, Hallucinations, Lacks friends, Psychotic actions
Anger, Insolence, Denies all problems, Impulsivity, Noncompliance, Insulting & teasing, Refuses therapy, Threatening, Inconsiderate, Complains about staff, Assaults
22. Oak Ridge - Clinical Problems 3. Service Opportunities? Disciplines
Participation a crucial clinical problem
Unit Specialization
Programs for Risk-related problems
23. What Influences Ontario Review Board Decisions?(Hilton & Simmons, 2001) Percentage of MDOs Recommended Since most of the variables in the model of clinician recommendations were unrelated or inversely related to risk,
You wont be surprised to see this graph
It shows, clinicians recommendations are unrelated to risk of violence. The chance of being recommended for transfer by the senior clinician is the same regardless of the patients level of risk.
Any emphasis on dangerousness or public safety is absent from these recommendations. Im not saying that clinicians dont think about risk, or they dont look at the VRAG,
But after all the information they try to juggle, they come up with a recommendation that does not reflect the risk of violent recidivism
So, if the board needs to hear evidence from clinicians to address some of its considerations,
It should still look at evidence that is related to risk of violence if their decisions are to reflect dangerousness or public safety. The clinicians are not speaking to that issue.
Since most of the variables in the model of clinician recommendations were unrelated or inversely related to risk,
You wont be surprised to see this graph
It shows, clinicians recommendations are unrelated to risk of violence. The chance of being recommended for transfer by the senior clinician is the same regardless of the patients level of risk.
Any emphasis on dangerousness or public safety is absent from these recommendations. Im not saying that clinicians dont think about risk, or they dont look at the VRAG,
But after all the information they try to juggle, they come up with a recommendation that does not reflect the risk of violent recidivism
So, if the board needs to hear evidence from clinicians to address some of its considerations,
It should still look at evidence that is related to risk of violence if their decisions are to reflect dangerousness or public safety. The clinicians are not speaking to that issue.
24. Mental Illness and Assessing the Risk of Violence MacArthur Violence Risk Assessment Study
3 sites, emergency units, 58% voluntary, 59% male, diagnoses, ethnic groups
CTS self report and other sources, 5 follow-up assessments
25. Mental Illness and Assessing the Risk of Violence Modified VRAG: 10 items
20 weeks: serious violence (ROC = .72), number of incidents (r = .34), injury (r = .25)
50 weeks: serious violence, number of violent incidents, arrests for violence, injury, severity
Sex, symptoms, diagnoses, psychopathy, nonpatients
26. Implications: Patients are more at risk
Forensicization of Mentally Ill
27. Conclusions: Mental disorders pose a public safety threat
but schizophrenia and other serious mental illnesses are not risk factors in identified populations
compared to other conditions
Difficulty of small targets
28. Conclusions: Clinical practice has the opportunity to improve public safety
Using new developments in risk assessment
And methods to seek system improvements.