Does Psychological Treatment For Adult Sex
Offenders Work?
July 4, 2006
Psychological treatment for adult sex offenders can reduce reoffending rates but
does not provide a cure, say experts in an editorial in this week's BMJ.
Sexual offending is a public health issue and a social problem. Psychological
treatment is widely used and is often mandated in the sentencing decision for
sexual offenders. But just how effective are psychological treatment programmes?
Are they too readily accepted uncritically?
Specialists in psychology and criminology review the evidence from published
studies.
In an analysis of randomised controlled trials on behavioural treatments, they
found that most studies were too small to be informative, although statistically
significant improvements were recorded across some groups of offenders.
The largest, longest trial compared group therapy with no group therapy for 231
men guilty of child abuse, exhibitionism, or sexual assault. During the
subsequent 10 years, a greater proportion of those allocated to group therapy
were re-arrested, but this did not reach statistical significance.
However, evidence from these types of trials provides only a fraction of the
knowledge needed, particularly on recidivism (used here to mean a repeat sexual
offence), say the authors.
Treatment failure is associated with higher rates of recidivism, and offenders
who successfully complete a treatment programme reoffend less often and less
seriously (that is non-sexual reoffending) than those who do not show that they
have understood and worked through the relevant psychological issues.
Paedophilia cannot always be successfully treated, they write. Better
understanding of the outcomes of treatments - either controlling and moderating
or harming and worsening behaviour - could at least focus on the most beneficial
and cost effective interventions.
There is enormous political and institutional pressure to prove that treatment
works. Assessment of all outcomes must take the expectations of researchers into
account, and also offenders' and therapists' perceptions of treatment.
It should be possible to combine the strength of randomised controlled trials
with the collection of good qualitative data and to ensure that psychological
interventions for sexual offenders are assessed effectively, they conclude.
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BMJ Volume 333 pp 5-6
Contact: Emma Dickinson
BMJ-British Medical Journal
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