Hopelessness Depression as a Predictive Risk Factor for Recidivism and Survival Time Among Juvenile Offenders

In the United States, there is a high incidence of recidivism among juvenile offenders with mental health disorders. This is a critical social issue facing the public and the Department of Juvenile Justice Administration today. However, research is not clear on the role of psychological factors in r...

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Main Author: McGinnis, Todd Milton
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: ScholarWorks 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/4464
https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5567&context=dissertations
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spelling ndltd-waldenu.edu-oai-scholarworks.waldenu.edu-dissertations-55672019-10-30T01:10:28Z Hopelessness Depression as a Predictive Risk Factor for Recidivism and Survival Time Among Juvenile Offenders McGinnis, Todd Milton In the United States, there is a high incidence of recidivism among juvenile offenders with mental health disorders. This is a critical social issue facing the public and the Department of Juvenile Justice Administration today. However, research is not clear on the role of psychological factors in recidivism frequency and survival time. The purpose of this study was to examine whether hopelessness depression, as measured by suicidal-ideation, depression-anxiety, anger-irritation, and alcohol-drug use, and offense type, were predictors of recidivism frequency and survival time when controlling for age, gender, and race. The total sample consisted of archival data from 404 juvenile offenders between the ages 13 and 19, who were detainees in the Juvenile Detention facility between January 1, 2009, and December 31, 2012. Data consisted of scores from the Massachusetts Youth Screening Instrument, which is part of the standard intake screening at time of booking. A hierarchical regression analysis indicated a collective significant predictive relationship between age, gender, race, suicidal-ideation, depression-anxiety, anger-irritation, alcohol-drug-use, and recidivism frequency and survival time. Posthoc analyses of variance indicated statistically significant differences in alcohol-drug-use and anger-irritation levels between races. However, the multiple linear regression indicated that suicidal-ideation and depression-anxiety did not significantly predict either recidivism frequency or survival time. Results could enable juvenile justice staff to detect hopelessness depression among juvenile reoffenders at an earlier stage and offer better treatment aimed at reducing future occurrences of youth recidivism, thereby benefitting individuals as well as society. 2017-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/4464 https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5567&context=dissertations Walden Dissertations and Doctoral Studies en ScholarWorks African American Anger Hopelessness Depression Juveniles Recidivism Substance use Survival time African American Studies Criminology Criminology and Criminal Justice Social and Behavioral Sciences
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic African American Anger
Hopelessness Depression
Juveniles
Recidivism
Substance use
Survival time
African American Studies
Criminology
Criminology and Criminal Justice
Social and Behavioral Sciences
spellingShingle African American Anger
Hopelessness Depression
Juveniles
Recidivism
Substance use
Survival time
African American Studies
Criminology
Criminology and Criminal Justice
Social and Behavioral Sciences
McGinnis, Todd Milton
Hopelessness Depression as a Predictive Risk Factor for Recidivism and Survival Time Among Juvenile Offenders
description In the United States, there is a high incidence of recidivism among juvenile offenders with mental health disorders. This is a critical social issue facing the public and the Department of Juvenile Justice Administration today. However, research is not clear on the role of psychological factors in recidivism frequency and survival time. The purpose of this study was to examine whether hopelessness depression, as measured by suicidal-ideation, depression-anxiety, anger-irritation, and alcohol-drug use, and offense type, were predictors of recidivism frequency and survival time when controlling for age, gender, and race. The total sample consisted of archival data from 404 juvenile offenders between the ages 13 and 19, who were detainees in the Juvenile Detention facility between January 1, 2009, and December 31, 2012. Data consisted of scores from the Massachusetts Youth Screening Instrument, which is part of the standard intake screening at time of booking. A hierarchical regression analysis indicated a collective significant predictive relationship between age, gender, race, suicidal-ideation, depression-anxiety, anger-irritation, alcohol-drug-use, and recidivism frequency and survival time. Posthoc analyses of variance indicated statistically significant differences in alcohol-drug-use and anger-irritation levels between races. However, the multiple linear regression indicated that suicidal-ideation and depression-anxiety did not significantly predict either recidivism frequency or survival time. Results could enable juvenile justice staff to detect hopelessness depression among juvenile reoffenders at an earlier stage and offer better treatment aimed at reducing future occurrences of youth recidivism, thereby benefitting individuals as well as society.
author McGinnis, Todd Milton
author_facet McGinnis, Todd Milton
author_sort McGinnis, Todd Milton
title Hopelessness Depression as a Predictive Risk Factor for Recidivism and Survival Time Among Juvenile Offenders
title_short Hopelessness Depression as a Predictive Risk Factor for Recidivism and Survival Time Among Juvenile Offenders
title_full Hopelessness Depression as a Predictive Risk Factor for Recidivism and Survival Time Among Juvenile Offenders
title_fullStr Hopelessness Depression as a Predictive Risk Factor for Recidivism and Survival Time Among Juvenile Offenders
title_full_unstemmed Hopelessness Depression as a Predictive Risk Factor for Recidivism and Survival Time Among Juvenile Offenders
title_sort hopelessness depression as a predictive risk factor for recidivism and survival time among juvenile offenders
publisher ScholarWorks
publishDate 2017
url https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/dissertations/4464
https://scholarworks.waldenu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=5567&context=dissertations
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