Hornsveld Ruud H J, Kraaimaat Floris W, Muris Peter, Zwets Almar J, Kanters Thijs
Department of Forensic Psychiatry, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands
Radboud University, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
J Interpers Violence. 2015 Nov;30(18):3174-91. doi: 10.1177/0886260514555007. Epub 2014 Nov 10.
The effects of Aggression Replacement Training (ART) were explored in a group of Dutch violent young men aged 16 to 21 years, who were obliged by the court to follow a treatment program in a forensic psychiatric outpatient clinic. To evaluate the training, patients completed a set of self-report questionnaires at three moments in time: at intake/before a waiting period, after the waiting period/before the training, and after the training. During the waiting period, the patients did not change on most measures, although they displayed a significant increase in anger. The patients who completed the therapy scored significantly lower on psychopathy than the patients who dropped out. The training produced significant decreases in physical aggression and social anxiety and showed trends toward a decline in self-reported hostility, general aggression, and anger. After the training, the patients scored comparably with a reference group on measures of hostility and aggressive behavior. Altogether, these results provide tentative support for the efficacy of the ART for violent young men referred to forensic psychiatric outpatient settings.
研究人员对一群年龄在16至21岁之间的荷兰暴力青年男子进行了攻击替代训练(ART)效果的探究,这些人因法庭要求在法医精神科门诊接受治疗项目。为评估该训练,患者在三个时间点完成了一组自我报告问卷:入院时/等待期前、等待期后/训练前以及训练后。在等待期内,大多数指标上患者没有变化,尽管他们的愤怒情绪显著增加。完成治疗的患者在精神病态方面的得分显著低于退出治疗的患者。该训练使身体攻击和社交焦虑显著降低,并显示出自报敌意、一般攻击性和愤怒有下降趋势。训练后,患者在敌意和攻击行为指标上的得分与参照组相当。总体而言,这些结果为ART对转介到法医精神科门诊的暴力青年男子的疗效提供了初步支持。