Attending to the Positive: A Retrospective Validation of the Structured Assessment of Protective Factors-Sexual Offence Version

Author:

Nolan Thomas1,Willis Gwenda M.2ORCID,Thornton David3ORCID,Kelley Sharon M.4,Christofferson Sarah Beggs1

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychology, Speech and Hearing, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand

2. School of Psychology, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand

3. FAsTR, LLC, Madison, WI, USA

4. Sand Ridge Secure Treatment Centre, Madison WI, USA

Abstract

Sexual recidivism risk assessment tools focus almost exclusively on risk factors associated with increased rates of recidivism and do not attend to protective factors that might mitigate reoffense risk. The present study investigated the predictive validity of the Structured Assessment of Protective Factors - Sexual Offence version (SAPROF-SO), developed to assess hypothesised protective factors against sexual recidivism in adult males. The SAPROF-SO pilot version contains 24 items across two domains: Personal and Professionally Provided Support. SAPROF-SO scores were rated retrospectively from a review of archived case files of 210 men with convictions for child sexual offenses, using the SAPROF-SO pilot manual and a supplementary retrospective scoring guide developed for the current study. SAPROF-SO Total and Personal domain scores were significantly predictive of sexual recidivism after an average follow-up period of 12.24 years (AUC = .81), and to a lesser extent, violent and general recidivism. SAPROF-SO Total and Personal scores additionally provided significant incremental validity over Static-99R scores in the prediction of sexual recidivism. Results support the predictive validity of protective factors for reduced sexual recidivism and invite future research examining how to integrate the SAPROF-SO alongside contemporary sexual recidivism risk assessment tools.

Funder

Royal Society Te Apārangi

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,General Psychology

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