Kingston Drew A, Olver Mark E, McDonald Jared, Cameron Colin
Royal Ottawa Health Care Group and University of Ottawa, Ottawa, ON, Canada.
University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK, Canada.
Crim Behav Ment Health. 2018 Aug;28(4):369-382. doi: 10.1002/cbm.2077. Epub 2018 May 6.
Interventions for offenders with mental illness have tended to be confined to treatment of illness, with the expectation that symptom reduction will be accompanied by reduced criminal recidivism, but recent evidence suggests that other treatment targets may be more effective against recidivism.
The aim of this study was to examine the effect of a cognitive skills programme (Reasoning and Rehabilitation 2: Short Version for Adults [R&R2]) among offenders with mental illness. Our first hypothesis was that participation in this programme would result in significantly greater improvement in antisocial attitudes than among similar prisoners who did not participate; both groups received "treatment as usual" (TAU). Our second hypothesis was that those receiving R&R2 would show less post-treatment violent or general recidivism than those receiving TAU alone.
Incarcerated offenders with serious mental illness (N = 101) were randomly assigned to R&R2 or TAU alone. Criminal attitudes and mental state were examined before and after treatment. Violent and non-violent recidivism was measured, on average, 18 months after release.
In both intervention and TAU alone trial arms, there were significant pre- to post-treatment changes in criminal attitudes and symptoms or signs of mental disorder. There was no difference between groups in these respects. These pre/post changes were not associated with reductions in recidivism over time, whether or not controlling for baseline risk.
Although there was no demonstrable advantage of R&R2 over TAU alone, non-significant trends towards lower violent recidivism in the R&R2 group and general recidivism in the TAU group suggest that it may be worth repeating the trial in a larger sample with more differentiated control groups.
针对患有精神疾病的罪犯的干预措施往往局限于疾病治疗,期望症状减轻能伴随着犯罪再犯率的降低,但最近的证据表明,其他治疗目标可能对预防再犯更有效。
本研究的目的是检验认知技能项目(《推理与康复2:成人简版》[R&R2])对患有精神疾病的罪犯的效果。我们的第一个假设是,参与该项目的人在反社会态度方面的改善将显著大于未参与的类似囚犯;两组都接受“常规治疗”(TAU)。我们的第二个假设是,接受R&R2治疗的人在治疗后的暴力或一般再犯率将低于仅接受TAU治疗的人。
将患有严重精神疾病的在押罪犯(N = 101)随机分为R&R2组或仅接受TAU组。在治疗前后检查犯罪态度和精神状态。平均在释放后18个月测量暴力和非暴力再犯情况。
在干预组和仅接受TAU治疗的试验组中,治疗前后犯罪态度以及精神障碍的症状或体征均有显著变化。两组在这些方面没有差异。这些治疗前后的变化与再犯率随时间的降低无关,无论是否控制基线风险。
尽管没有证明R&R2比仅接受TAU治疗有明显优势,但R&R2组暴力再犯率较低和TAU组一般再犯率较低的非显著趋势表明,在更大样本和更具区分性的对照组中重复该试验可能是值得的。