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Risk Assessment in Forensic Learning Disability Psychology

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Title: Risk Assessment in Forensic Learning Disability Psychology


1
Risk Assessment in Forensic Learning Disability
Psychology
  • Dr Jeremy Tudway
  • Consultant Forensic Clinical Psychologist/Lecturer
    -Practitioner in Clinical Psychology

2
Risk Assessment Context
  • Justice is now very much less important than
    risk, as a preoccupation of criminal justice/law
    and order policy the politics of safety have
    overwhelmed attachment to justice in the
    institutions of late-modern demographic polities
  • Gray, et.al., (2001)

3
What should risk assessments do? i
  • Identify likely outcome
  • Estimate
  • Likelihood
  • Probability
  • Identify factors
  • Increase
  • Decrease
  • Reliable and valid

4
What should risk assessments do? ii
  • Probability NOT Possibility
  • The LIKELIHOOD of a given event
  • Not the HYPOTHETICAL chance
  • It is possible that anyone could set a fire,
    whereas the probability of someone with no
    fire-setting history, no interest in fires and
    few interpersonal problems deliberately setting
    fires is small in comparison to someone who has
    previously set fires, shows a long-term interest
    and has gross interpersonal problems

5
Problems with Risk Assessment
  • Hired guns
  • Ill-informed appraisal
  • Poorly researched instruments
  • Inadequate base-rate estimates
  • Not really knowing the true rate of occurrence
  • Actuarial versus Clinical data
  • But, crime detection and conviction does not
    necessarily equate to the true rate at which
    offending has taken place.

6
Clinical versus Actuarial i
  • Clinician accuracy is low (violent behaviour).
  • Monahan (1981)
  • Clinical
  • Not systematic or standardized, based on
    judgment.
  • Evidence suggests that professional judgement
    is generally very poor and fraught with biases
  • Mental health professionals often make critical
    decisions in the first couple of seconds of a
    contact and then direct questions towards
    proving their assumptions!
  • Actuarial
  • Systematic, standardized, rule-governed.
  • Empirical literature
  • Clinical tends to be more conservative.

7
Clinical versus Actuarial ii
  • All risk assessment procedures still require
    professional judgment
  • Choice of scale, or critical variables
  • Interpretation of scores
  • Using idiosyncratic or clinical judgement
  • No systematic empirical support
  • Low agreement (unreliable) and accuracy
    (unvalidated)
  • Actuarial risk assessment by trained assistants
    has stronger predictive validity than therapists
    assessment.
  • Grove Meehl (1996)
  • 40 of better, 40 no difference, 10 poorer
  • Beech Ward (2003)

8
Six risk assessment methods(Doren, 2002)
  • Unstructured/unguided clinical judgment
  • Case material without any structured assessment.
    Decisions are intuitive or experiential.
  •  Purely actuarial approach
  • Straightforward algorithmic procedures and
    risk-prediction instruments. Reliant on
    historical/static risk factors and coding to
    arrive at a probability of reconviction.
  •  Guided clinical judgment
  • Clinical judgment without relating to current
    theories of risk.
  •  Anamnestic risk assessment
  • Life history examined in relation to
    dispositional contextual factors. Current
    circumstances examined for presence of particular
    identified risk factors
  •  Research-guided clinical judgment.
  • Apriori set of research-informed factors (e.g.,
    SVR-20) as a guide to assessment.
  •  Clinically adjusted actuarial approach.
  • Initial employment of one or more actuarial
    instruments is followed by potential adjustments
    based on clinical/dispositional considerations.

9
What is a predictor?
  • it is often said that the best predictor of
    future violence is past violence, and anyone with
    a history of violence needs to be managed with
    care..
  • Unless there are good reasons to believe that
    major changes have occurred, it is always wise to
    assume that violence is a possibility, and to
    take steps accordingly
  • Sellars, (2002)

10
In other words.
A TINY bit more work required here I think?
11
Structured Risk Assessment
  • Many different devices
  • SACJ (Thornton)
  • RM2000 (Thornton)
  • VRAG (Quinsey, Harris, Rice Cormier)
  • HCR-20 (Webster)
  • RRASOR (Hanson)
  • SVR-20 (Boer, Hart, Kropp Webster)
  • OASYS (Home Office)
  • Approximately 26 specific sex offender risk
    assessments to date! (Doren, 2002)

12
Static Variables
  • Tombstone factors
  • Always additive
  • Usually negative
  • Although the long-term probability may reduce
    evidence is unclear
  • Tend to out-weigh other sources of data
  • (eg PCL-r)

13
Dynamic Variables
  • Indicators of change
  • Dynamic
  • Can reduce and increase
  • Can be both positive and negative
  • Linked to harm-reduction or relapse-prevention
    models
  • Can be linked to intervention
  • Ideally lend themselves to psychometric data
  • (eg SOAP)

14
Acute Stable Dynamic Variables
  • Acute dynamic factors
  • Indicate high likelihood of an offense in the
    near future. (Hanson Harris, 2001)
  •  Integrated model that includes
  • Distal factors (developmental)
  • Historical and stable dynamic (vulnerability or
    trait)
  • Triggering events (contextual factors) that
    combine with static and stable dynamic factors
    and this drive
  • Acute dynamic (state) factors.
  • (Beech Ward, 2003)

15
Base Rates
  • The frequency of the target behaviour in any
    given population
  • Accurately know the prevalence
  • Offending behaviour is grossly underestimated by
    conviction
  • The rate at which acts occur in the population of
    interest is critical to the predictive ability of
    any instrument.

16
The Base Rate Fallacy
  • Failure to take base rates into account when
    judging probability.
  • When considering a particular case, the
    statistics for that population should also be
    considered.
  • People tend to ignore the population base rate
  • People are not good statisticians!

17
Problems with Prediction i
Hits
Hits
True Positive
True Negative
Misses
Misses
False Positive
False Negative
18
Problems with Prediction ii
  • False positives
  • Ethical
  • Restriction and impingement of human rights
  • Creating more problems (vicarious learning,
    institutionalisation)
  • Alarm and concern to systems
  • Cost
  • False negatives
  • Ethical
  • Exposing people to unnecessary potential harm
  • Undermining public confidence in services
  • Damage to public perceptions of PwLD
  • Cost

19
Problems with Prediction iii
  • The most widely research tools report good
    sensitivity using the Receiver Operator
    Characteristic (ROC) curve
  • Estimates the accuracy of the instrument by
    calculating how much data can be accounted for
    using
  • Sensitivity
  • True positive rate
  • Hits
  • Specificity
  • True negative rate
  • Misses

20
Problems with Prediction iv
  • No matter how good the ROC curve, with low
    frequency, high impact behaviour.
  • Over estimation of risk and false positives
  • Positive predictive value (the proportion of
    positive predictions that turn out correct)
  • (eg Szmukler, 2001a,b)

21
Problems with Prediction v
  • Statistical significance is not necessarily
    linked to clinical significance.
  • The probability of a given number arising on an
    analysis may be remote but this does not suggest
    that this figure is of particular significance to
    an individual

22
New ways of thinking?
  • Combining both Actuarial Clinical data
  • (Beech Ward, 2003)
  • Dynamic Static factors
  • Situational Accidental triggers
  • The dichotomy between clinical and actuarial is
    unhelpful and being replaced by hybrid models,
    such as the HCR-20
  • (Johnston, 2002)
  • Despite this increasing sophistication of
    research in mainstream forensic psychiatry, the
    ability to predict future offending behaviour
    remains very limited.
  • Turner (2000)

23
How appropriate are existing schemes?
  • Can actuarial predictors developed in psychiatric
    or prison populations be valid for individuals
    with intellectual disabilities?
  • (Green et.al., 2002 Johnston, 2002 Turner,
    2000)
  • Adapted SACJ significantly inflates risk estimate
    in an LD group
  • Under reporting and variable legal responses to
    offending behaviour in PwLD.
  • Conviction not associated with
  • Volume
  • Victim range
  • Risk status
  • (Green et.al., 2002)

24
Challenges i
  • Methodological problems
  • Sampling (range, borderline)
  • Definitions (Violence, Sexual offence)
  • Convicted versus non-convicted (Cautions)
  • (eg Green et.al., 2002 Lindsey, 2002)
  • Rationale for good practice is ill-defined
  • (eg Johnstone, 2002)

25
Challenges ii
  • Difficult to make reasonable comparisons
  • Reported re-offending rates vary from study to
    study 0-28 31.3-85
  • (Barron et.al., 2002)
  • Difficult to establish predictive factors
  • Few differences on factors associated with sexual
    recidivism
  • (Green et.al., 2002)
  • Actuarial measures share a common theoretical
    heritage
  • How appropriate to use multiple forms?

26
The Future i
  • Co-ordinated approach to research and data
    gathering
  • Initiate inclusive collaborative research to
    retrospectively identify key predictor variables
    using robust technologies
  • Initiate a longitudinal prospective study using
    identified factors
  • Develop culturally sensitive reference groups
  • Ethnicity, Social expectations

27
The Future ii
  • Develop meaningful normative models for comparing
    key behaviours
  • Sexual (eg beliefs, behaviours), Interpersonal
    (eg assertion), Motivational (eg
    impulsivity), Social (eg gender roles) etc
  • Include cautions and systematically detailed
    reports of problem behaviours in addition to
    convictions
  • Develop functional formulation
  • Develop Offence Parallel Behaviour models
  • Make the technologies available
  • Establish government funding
  • Communicate the findings and change practice as a
    result!

28
A final point?
  • Despite all the complications there are, however,
    two things one can predict with certainty

Death and Taxes
29
References
  • Barron, P., Hassiotis A. Banes, J. (2002)
    Offenders with intellectual disability the size
    of the problem and therapeutic outcomes. Journal
    of Intellectual Disability Research. 46, 6, 454
    463.
  • Beech, A.R. Ward T. (2003) The integration of
    etiology and risk in sexual offenders A
    theoretical framework. Aggression and Violent
    Behavior. 295 In Press
  • Doren, D. M. (2002). Evaluating sex offenders A
    Manual for Civil Commitments and Beyond. London
    Sage.
  • Gray, N.S., Laing, J. Noakes, L. (Eds) (2001)
    Criminal Justice, Mental Health and the Politics
    of Risk. London Cavendish Press.
  • Green, G., Gray, N.S. Willner, P. (2002)
    Factors associated with criminal convictions for
    sexually inappropriate behaviour in men with
    learning disabilities. The Journal of Forensic
    Psychiatry. 13, 3, 578-607.
  • Grove, W. M., Meehl, P. E. (1996). Comparative
    efficiency of informal (subjective,
    impressionistic) and formal (mechanical,
    algorithmic) prediction procedures The clinical
    statistical controversy. Psychology, Public
    Policy, and Law, 2, 293323.
  • Hanson, R. K., Harris, A. (2001). The sex
    offender need assessment rating (SONAR) A method
    for measuring change in risk levels. Available
    www.sgc.gc.ca/epub/corr/e200001a/e200001b/e200001b
    .htm.
  • Johnston, S. J. (2002) Risk assessment in
    offenders with intellectual disability the
    evidence base. Journal of Intellectual Disability
    Research. 46 Sup1, 47-56.
  • Lindsay, W.R. (2002) Research and literature on
    sex offenders with intellectual and developmental
    disabilities. Journal of Intellectual Disability
    Research. 46 Sup1, 74-85.
  • Monahan, J. (1981) Predicting Violent Behavior
    An Assessment of Clinical Techniques. Beverley
    Hills Sage.
  • Sellars, C. (2002) Risk Assessment in People with
    Learning Disabilities. BPS Books, Blackwell.
  • Szmukler, G. (2001a) The mathematics of risk
    assessment for serious violence. Psychiatric
    Bulletin 25 359
  • Szmukler, G. (2001b)Violence risk prediction in
    practice. The British Journal of Psychiatry. 178
    84-85
  • Turner, S. (2000) Forensic Risk Assessment in
    Intellectual Disabilities The Evidence Base and
    Current Practice in One English Region. Journal
    of Applied Research in Intellectual Disabilities.
    13, 4, 239
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