Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy Efficacy for Reducing Recidivism Rates of Moderate- and High-Risk Sexual Offenders: A Scoping Systematic Literature Review

Author:

Mpofu Elias12,Athanasou James A.1,Rafe Christine1,Belshaw Scott H.3

Affiliation:

1. University of Sydney–Cumberland Campus, New South Wales, Australia

2. Central University of Technology, Bloemfontein, South Africa

3. University of North Texas, Denton, USA

Abstract

This literature scoping review compared recidivism rates of moderate- and high-risk sexual offenders who received cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) oriented treatments. Ten empirical studies from 2001 to 2014 were selected for review that met the following criteria: (a) Treatment program included a CBT-based intervention with a comparative intervention; (b) participants included adult, male, moderate- and high-risk sexual offenders only; and (c) follow-up data for up to 12 months. Data were analyzed using a summative metric for recidivism rate comparisons ( N = 3,073 for CBT and N = 3,588, for comparison approaches). Sexual offense recidivism rates varied from 0.6% to 21.8% (with CBT) and from 4.5% to 32.3% (with comparison intervention). The within-sample median rate of violent recidivism with a history of sexual offense was 21.1% (with CBT) versus 32.6% (comparison). Sexual offenders had a general felonies (within-sample) median recidivism rate of 27.05% (with CBT) versus 51.05% (comparison). The evidence supports the conclusion that CBT in its various forms is an efficacious treatment modality to prevent offense recidivism by sexual offenders. Suggestions for future research are considered.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Applied Psychology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Pathology and Forensic Medicine

Reference63 articles.

1. Abrahams N., Denvries K., Watts C., Pallito C., Petzold M., Shamu S., Garcia-Moreno C. (2015). Prevalence of non-partner sexual violence: A review of global data. In Donnely P. D., Ward C. L. (Eds.), Violence prevention: Epidemiology, evidence and policy (pp. 49-56). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.

2. Allam J. (1999). Effective practice in work with sex offenders: A re-conviction study comparing treated and untreated offenders. Birmingham: UK: West Midlands Probation Service, Sex Offender Unit.

3. American Psychiatric Association. (1999). Dangerous sex offenders: A task force report of the American Psychiatric Association, Washington, DC: Author.

4. The Risk-Need-Responsivity (RNR) Model

5. Scoping studies: towards a methodological framework

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