Petersen Kevin, Davis Robert C, Weisburd David, Taylor Bruce
Department of Criminology, Law and Society George Mason University Fairfax Virginia USA.
National Police Foundation Arlington Virginia USA.
Campbell Syst Rev. 2022 Jan 28;18(1):e1217. doi: 10.1002/cl2.1217. eCollection 2022 Mar.
Family abuse is a recurrent phenomenon within a select population of households. This form of abuse can include any physical or psychological harassment that occurs between family or household members, and often involves complex mental and emotional issues that are resistant to intervention. Traditional criminal justice strategies for combating this issue have evolved over time but have frequently demonstrated limited success. Within the past few decades, multiagency programs to address repeat family abuse have gained popularity. One such program, termed "second responders," teams police officers with social service workers, victim advocates, or counselors to conduct follow-up visits with victims of family abuse following a complaint. Second responders seek to educate victims about the cyclical nature of family abuse, engage in safety planning, and/or provide service referrals. These interventions are based on the premise that victims are more likely to be receptive to crime prevention opportunities immediately following victimization. Second responder interventions have received support from the US Department of Justice and their adoption has spread in both the United States and internationally, however, there remains little conclusive evidence on their effects.
To update and extend the findings of the prior second responders systematic review and meta-analysis by synthesizing the results of published and unpublished second responder evaluations through October of 2021. This review also examines the use of victim services as a secondary outcome and incorporates a number of additional moderator analyses.
The Global Policing Database (GPD), a repository of all experimental and quasi-experimental evaluations of policing interventions conducted since 1950, was searched using keywords related to second responder interventions and repeat family violence from 2004 to December 2019 (https://gpd.uq.edu.au/s/gpd/page/about). This search was also supplemented with additional strategies, such as reference harvesting of prior reviews, searching 2020 and 2021 volumes of leading academic journals, reviewing the reference lists of eligible studies, searching additional gray literature repositories focused on domestic violence, and consulting with eligible study authors.
Eligible studies were required to include a treatment group that received the second responder intervention and a comparison group that did not. Assignment to these conditions could be either experimental or quasi-experimental, but quasi-experimental studies were required to use either matched comparison groups or multivariate analysis methods to control for confounding factors. Eligibility was limited to studies reporting on at least one measure of repeat family abuse, such as intimate partner violence, elder abuse, or general family abuse. Measures of repeat abuse could be based on either official (i.e., police data) or unofficial (i.e., victim survey data) data sources.
Five new studies were identified between 2004 and 2019, all of which contained sufficient data for the calculation of at least one effect size. Along with the 10 studies included in the prior review, a total of 15 studies and 29 distinct effect sizes were analyzed across three outcome constructs. Effect sizes were calculated as logged odds ratios and results were synthesized using random effects models with restricted maximum likelihood estimation. Final results were exponentiated to represent the percentage point difference in the odds of a given outcome for treatment groups relative to control groups. Risk of bias was assessed using items adapted from the Cochrane Risk of Bias tools for experimental and quasi-experimental studies. Eligible studies were generally considered to be of low risk of bias, however, issues with survey success/contact rates and the analytical approaches to these problems led to concern in several studies.
These analyses suggest that second responder interventions produced no significant effects on either police or victim-reported measures of repeat family abuse, in aggregate. However, findings from the more rigorous experimental studies indicated that second responder interventions were associated with a statistically significant 22% (95% confidence interval [CI] [1.04, 1.43]) increase in the odds of a police-reported repeat family abuse incident, with no significant variability in individual study results. Additionally, studies that measured the use of victim services as a secondary outcome were associated with a statistically significant 9% (95% CI [1.02, 1.16]) increase in the odds of service use for treatment groups relative to control groups. Several study characteristics also proved to be important moderators of treatment effects. Increases in the speed of the second response were associated with significant decreases in the odds of a victim-reported repeat incident, and studies that measured repeat family abuse using households were associated with significantly higher odds of a police-reported repeat incident, compared to studies that used the same victim or victim/offender pairing more generally.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Second responder interventions are undoubtedly appealing based on their logic and intentions. Yet, well-intentioned programs with sound logic can still backfire, and the results of this updated review provide evidence that may be suggestive of a backfire effect. Even so, any firm conclusions from this review are limited by a lack of knowledge on the mechanisms operating in between the implementation of the second response intervention and the observed effects, as well as the small sample sizes involved in many analyses. While it seems clear that these programs are not producing any broad reductions in self-reported victimization, the increase in police-reported violence seen in experimental studies could indicate either a true increase in abuse or an increased willingness to call the police. The lack of observed impact on victim-reported violence would suggest the latter, but without more specific measures, such conclusions should be avoided. If these results are indicative of increased reporting, however, many may consider this a desirable outcome, particularly given the often-underreported nature of family abuse and the potential for increased reporting to lead to long-term reductions in abuse. Furthermore, these results provide an indication that second responder programs can produce other intended effects, such as increasing the retention of victim services, and that the specific characteristics of these interventions may moderate their effects. It is unclear why elements such as the immediacy of the second response or the unit of analysis being evaluated would impact study results, but these observations are consistent with the theory that domestic violence interventions must capitalize on short windows of opportunity and create separation between victims and offenders to reduce exposure and subsequent victimization. This potential indicates a need for more research on second responder programs, but specifically research that examines these moderating characteristics and mechanisms. Even in light of this potential, second responder programs do not, on average, appear to reduce the prevalence of repeat family abuse. Given the presence of alternative (and possibly more effective) domestic violence interventions that now exist (e.g., Safe Dates, Shifting Boundaries, Green Dot, etc.), it seems that policymakers may wish to look elsewhere for efforts to reduce family abuse.
家庭虐待在特定的家庭群体中是一种反复出现的现象。这种虐待形式包括家庭成员之间发生的任何身体或心理骚扰,并且常常涉及难以干预的复杂精神和情感问题。随着时间的推移,打击这一问题的传统刑事司法策略不断演变,但成效往往有限。在过去几十年中,应对反复发生的家庭虐待的多机构项目越来越受欢迎。其中一个名为“二次响应者”的项目,将警察与社会服务工作者、受害者倡导者或顾问组成团队,在接到投诉后对家庭虐待受害者进行后续探访。二次响应者旨在让受害者了解家庭虐待的周期性本质,参与安全规划,和/或提供服务转介。这些干预措施基于这样一个前提,即受害者在受害后更有可能接受预防犯罪的机会。二次响应者干预措施得到了美国司法部的支持,并且在美国和国际上都有采用,然而,关于其效果的确凿证据仍然很少。
通过综合截至2021年10月已发表和未发表的二次响应者评估结果,更新并扩展先前二次响应者系统评价和荟萃分析的结果。本评价还考察了受害者服务作为次要结果的使用情况,并纳入了一些额外的调节分析。
使用与2004年至2019年二次响应者干预措施和反复发生的家庭暴力相关的关键词,对全球警务数据库(GPD)进行检索,该数据库是自1950年以来所有警务干预措施的实验性和准实验性评估的存储库(https://gpd.uq.edu.au/s/gpd/page/about)。此次检索还辅以其他策略,如对先前综述进行参考文献收集、检索2020年和2021年主要学术期刊的卷册、查阅符合条件研究的参考文献列表、检索专注于家庭暴力的其他灰色文献存储库,以及咨询符合条件研究的作者。
符合条件的研究必须包括接受二次响应者干预措施的治疗组和未接受干预的对照组。分配到这些组别的方式可以是实验性的或准实验性的,但准实验性研究必须使用匹配对照组或多变量分析方法来控制混杂因素。入选仅限于报告至少一项反复发生的家庭虐待指标的研究,如亲密伴侣暴力、虐待老年人或一般家庭虐待。反复虐待的指标可以基于官方(即警方数据)或非官方(即受害者调查数据)数据源。
在2004年至2019年间确定了五项新研究,所有这些研究都包含足够的数据来计算至少一个效应量。连同先前综述中纳入的十项研究,总共对15项研究和29个不同的效应量进行了三项结果构建的分析。效应量计算为对数优势比,并使用限制最大似然估计的随机效应模型对结果进行综合。最终结果进行指数转换,以表示治疗组相对于对照组给定结果的优势比的百分点差异。使用从Cochrane偏倚风险工具改编的项目,对实验性和准实验性研究的偏倚风险进行评估。符合条件的研究通常被认为偏倚风险较低,然而,调查成功率/联系率问题以及针对这些问题的分析方法在一些研究中引发了关注。
这些分析表明,总体而言,二次响应者干预措施对警方或受害者报告的反复发生的家庭虐待指标均未产生显著影响。然而,更严格的实验性研究结果表明,二次响应者干预措施与警方报告的反复发生的家庭虐待事件的几率在统计学上显著增加22%(95%置信区间[CI][1.04, 1.43])相关,各研究结果之间无显著差异。此外,将受害者服务使用情况作为次要结果进行测量的研究表明,治疗组相对于对照组服务使用几率在统计学上显著增加9%(95% CI [1.02, 1.16])。几个研究特征也被证明是治疗效果的重要调节因素。二次响应速度的提高与受害者报告的反复事件几率的显著降低相关,并且与使用家庭来测量反复发生的家庭虐待的研究相比,使用相同受害者或受害者/犯罪者配对更普遍的研究中,警方报告的反复事件几率显著更高。
基于其逻辑和意图,二次响应者干预措施无疑具有吸引力。然而,逻辑合理且意图良好的项目仍可能适得其反,此次更新综述的结果提供了可能暗示适得其反效应的证据。即便如此,本综述的任何确定结论都受到对二次响应干预措施实施与观察到的效果之间运作机制的了解不足以及许多分析中样本量较小的限制。虽然似乎很明显这些项目并未使自我报告的受害情况大幅减少,但实验性研究中警方报告的暴力行为增加可能表明虐待行为真正增加,或者是报警意愿增强。对受害者报告的暴力行为缺乏观察到的影响可能表明是后者,但在没有更具体措施的情况下,应避免得出此类结论。然而,如果这些结果表明报告有所增加,许多人可能会认为这是一个理想的结果,特别是考虑到家庭虐待往往报告不足,以及报告增加可能导致虐待行为长期减少的可能性。此外,这些结果表明二次响应者项目可以产生其他预期效果,如增加受害者服务的留存率,并且这些干预措施的具体特征可能会调节其效果。尚不清楚为什么二次响应的即时性或所评估的分析单位等因素会影响研究结果,但这些观察结果与家庭暴力干预措施必须利用短暂的机会窗口并在受害者和犯罪者之间创造分离以减少接触和后续受害的理论一致。这种可能性表明需要对二次响应者项目进行更多研究,但具体是研究这些调节特征和机制。即便考虑到这种可能性,二次响应者项目平均而言似乎并未降低反复发生的家庭虐待的患病率。鉴于现在存在替代的(可能更有效的)家庭暴力干预措施(例如,安全约会、改变界限、绿点等),政策制定者似乎可能希望在其他地方寻找减少家庭虐待的努力方向。