Risk assessment and shared care planning in out-patient forensic psychiatry: cluster randomised controlled trial

Author:

Troquete Nadine A. C.,van den Brink Rob H. S.,Beintema Harry,Mulder Tamara,van Os Titus W. D. P.,Schoevers Robert A.,Wiersma Durk

Abstract

BackgroundForensic psychiatry aims to reduce recidivism and makes use of risk assessment tools to achieve this goal. Various studies have reported on the predictive qualities of these instruments, but it remains unclear whether their use is associated with actual prevention of recidivism in clinical care.AimsTo test whether an intervention combining risk assessment and shared care planning is associated with a reduction in violent and criminal behaviour.MethodA cluster randomised controlled trial (Netherlands Trial Register number NTR1042) was conducted in three outpatient forensic psychiatric clinics. The intervention comprised risk assessment with the Short Term Assessment of Risk and Treatability (START) and a shared care planning protocol formulated according to shared decision-making principles. The control group received usual care. The outcome consisted of the proportion of clients with violent or criminal incidents at follow-up.ResultsIn total 58 case managers and 632 of their clients were included, in the intervention group (n=310), 65% received the intervention at least once. Findings showed a general treatment effect (22% of clients with an incident at baseline v. 15% at follow-up, P<0.01) but no significant difference between the two treatment conditions (odds ratio (OR)=1.46, 95% CI 0.89-2.44, P = 0.15).ConclusionsAlthough risk assessment is common practice in forensic psychiatry, our results indicate that the primary goal of preventing recidivism was not reached through risk assessment embedded in shared decision-making.

Publisher

Royal College of Psychiatrists

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

Reference20 articles.

1. Social ties and short-term self-reported delinquent behaviour of personality disordered forensic outpatients

2. Risk assessment and release decision-making: toward resolving the great debate;Dvoskin;J Am Acad Psychiatry Law,2001

3. Routine violence risk assessment in community forensic mental healthcare;Van den Brink;Behav Sci Law,2010

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