Violent recidivism: a long-time follow-up study of mentally disordered offenders.

BACKGROUND: In this prospective study, mentally disordered perpetrators of severe violent and/or sexual crimes were followed through official registers for 59 (range 8 to 73) months. The relapse rate in criminality was assessed, compared between offenders sentenced to prison versus forensic psychiat...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Thomas Nilsson, Märta Wallinius, Christina Gustavson, Henrik Anckarsäter, Nóra Kerekes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3191156?pdf=render
id doaj-a9742daf1fa845458e37a3990ed51ea1
record_format Article
spelling doaj-a9742daf1fa845458e37a3990ed51ea12020-11-24T21:41:54ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-01610e2576810.1371/journal.pone.0025768Violent recidivism: a long-time follow-up study of mentally disordered offenders.Thomas NilssonMärta WalliniusChristina GustavsonHenrik AnckarsäterNóra KerekesBACKGROUND: In this prospective study, mentally disordered perpetrators of severe violent and/or sexual crimes were followed through official registers for 59 (range 8 to 73) months. The relapse rate in criminality was assessed, compared between offenders sentenced to prison versus forensic psychiatric care, and the predictive ability of various risk factors (criminological, clinical, and of structured assessment instruments) was investigated. METHOD: One hundred perpetrators were consecutively assessed between 1998 and 2001 by a clinical battery of established instruments covering DSM-IV diagnoses, psychosocial background factors, and structured assessment instruments (HCR-20, PCL-R, and life-time aggression (LHA)). Follow-up data was collected from official registers for: (i) recidivistic crimes, (ii) crimes during ongoing sanction. RESULTS: Twenty subjects relapsed in violent criminality during ongoing sanctions (n = 6) or after discharge/parole (n = 14). Individuals in forensic psychiatric care spent significantly more time at liberty after discharge compared to those in prison, but showed significantly fewer relapses. Criminological (age at first conviction), and clinical (conduct disorder and substance abuse/dependence) risk factors, as well as scores on structured assessment instruments, were moderately associated with violent recidivism. Logistic regression analyses showed that the predictive ability of criminological risk factors versus clinical risk factors combined with scores from assessment instruments was comparable, with each set of variables managing to correctly classify about 80% of all individuals, but the only predictors that remained significant in multiple models were criminological (age at first conviction, and a history of substance abuse among primary relatives). CONCLUSIONS: Only one in five relapsed into serious criminality, with significantly more relapses among subjects sentenced to prison as compared to forensic psychiatric care. Criminological risk factors tended to be the best predictors of violent relapses, while few synergies were seen when the risk factors were combined. Overall, the predictive validity of common risk factors for violent criminality was rather weak.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3191156?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas Nilsson
Märta Wallinius
Christina Gustavson
Henrik Anckarsäter
Nóra Kerekes
spellingShingle Thomas Nilsson
Märta Wallinius
Christina Gustavson
Henrik Anckarsäter
Nóra Kerekes
Violent recidivism: a long-time follow-up study of mentally disordered offenders.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Thomas Nilsson
Märta Wallinius
Christina Gustavson
Henrik Anckarsäter
Nóra Kerekes
author_sort Thomas Nilsson
title Violent recidivism: a long-time follow-up study of mentally disordered offenders.
title_short Violent recidivism: a long-time follow-up study of mentally disordered offenders.
title_full Violent recidivism: a long-time follow-up study of mentally disordered offenders.
title_fullStr Violent recidivism: a long-time follow-up study of mentally disordered offenders.
title_full_unstemmed Violent recidivism: a long-time follow-up study of mentally disordered offenders.
title_sort violent recidivism: a long-time follow-up study of mentally disordered offenders.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description BACKGROUND: In this prospective study, mentally disordered perpetrators of severe violent and/or sexual crimes were followed through official registers for 59 (range 8 to 73) months. The relapse rate in criminality was assessed, compared between offenders sentenced to prison versus forensic psychiatric care, and the predictive ability of various risk factors (criminological, clinical, and of structured assessment instruments) was investigated. METHOD: One hundred perpetrators were consecutively assessed between 1998 and 2001 by a clinical battery of established instruments covering DSM-IV diagnoses, psychosocial background factors, and structured assessment instruments (HCR-20, PCL-R, and life-time aggression (LHA)). Follow-up data was collected from official registers for: (i) recidivistic crimes, (ii) crimes during ongoing sanction. RESULTS: Twenty subjects relapsed in violent criminality during ongoing sanctions (n = 6) or after discharge/parole (n = 14). Individuals in forensic psychiatric care spent significantly more time at liberty after discharge compared to those in prison, but showed significantly fewer relapses. Criminological (age at first conviction), and clinical (conduct disorder and substance abuse/dependence) risk factors, as well as scores on structured assessment instruments, were moderately associated with violent recidivism. Logistic regression analyses showed that the predictive ability of criminological risk factors versus clinical risk factors combined with scores from assessment instruments was comparable, with each set of variables managing to correctly classify about 80% of all individuals, but the only predictors that remained significant in multiple models were criminological (age at first conviction, and a history of substance abuse among primary relatives). CONCLUSIONS: Only one in five relapsed into serious criminality, with significantly more relapses among subjects sentenced to prison as compared to forensic psychiatric care. Criminological risk factors tended to be the best predictors of violent relapses, while few synergies were seen when the risk factors were combined. Overall, the predictive validity of common risk factors for violent criminality was rather weak.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3191156?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT thomasnilsson violentrecidivismalongtimefollowupstudyofmentallydisorderedoffenders
AT martawallinius violentrecidivismalongtimefollowupstudyofmentallydisorderedoffenders
AT christinagustavson violentrecidivismalongtimefollowupstudyofmentallydisorderedoffenders
AT henrikanckarsater violentrecidivismalongtimefollowupstudyofmentallydisorderedoffenders
AT norakerekes violentrecidivismalongtimefollowupstudyofmentallydisorderedoffenders
_version_ 1725919999512543232