Publication | Closed Access
Within-treatment change in antisocial attitudes and reoffending in a large sample of custodial and community offenders.
17
Citations
45
References
2018
Year
Forensic PsychologyAntisocial AttitudesVictimologyCriminal LawOffender TreatmentMental HealthLarge SamplePsychologySocial SciencesClinical PsychologyPsychiatryForensic PsychiatryOffender ClassificationCriminal JusticeMcaa MeasuresSubstance AbuseAntisocial BehaviorSociologyCommunity OffendersMedicineAggressionPsychopathologyCriminal Behavior
This study tested evidence for antisocial attitudes as a mechanism of change in offender treatment by examining whether the Measures of Antisocial Attitudes and Associates (MCAA) and within-treatment change in scores on this scale have predictive validity for risk of reoffending. Pretreatment and posttreatment scores on the MCAA were obtained from a large sample of 1,858 offenders who had completed offender treatment programs while in custody (n = 854) or in the community (n = 1,004). Individual within-treatment change was calculated with simple difference scores as well as categorizations of clinically significant change. Results showed that discrete scores on a number of MCAA measures were associated with reoffending hazard at pretreatment and at posttreatment. Change over treatment was also highly significant at the group level whereas a modest proportion of offenders achieved clinically significant change. None of the measures of within-treatment change were significantly associated with reoffending, however. The results suggest that self-reported antisocial attitudes may not be a valid indicator of causal mechanisms of treatment or change in offenders' risk of reoffending as a result of completing treatment. (PsycINFO Database Record
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1