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Sex and Drugs

Sex and Drugs. Sex Offending. Types of Sex Offender? Not homogenous group Why this matters Causes of offending Effectiveness of interventions. Sex Offender Assessment. Standard Corrections Assessments Risk/Need Limitations? Sex-offender specific Phallemetric

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Sex and Drugs

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  1. Sex and Drugs

  2. Sex Offending • Types of Sex Offender? • Not homogenous group • Why this matters • Causes of offending • Effectiveness of interventions

  3. Sex Offender Assessment • Standard Corrections Assessments • Risk/Need • Limitations? • Sex-offender specific • Phallemetric • Marshall  less structured interview (PCL)

  4. Theories of Sex Offending • Is a general theory desirable/possible? • Rape • Child Molestation • Exposing/peeping, etc. • General Risk factors • Objectification/sexualization of women/children • Lack of prosocial role models • Lack of interpersonal skills

  5. Empirically, what is known? • Social Skill deficits • Criminal thinking errors • Depression/anxiety (?)

  6. Interventions • Pre-1960s = psychodynamic • 1960s-1970s = radical behavioral • 1980s = extend to social skills • 1980s/90s = cognitive behavioral • 1990s-now = add relapse prevention

  7. Meta-analysis of sex offending treatment • Overall mean effect of .14 • Radical behavioral only = -.14 • Cognitive behavioral and hormonal were best bets  .20 and beyond • Treatment effect larger with longer follow ups • Sex offenders may be at risk for 20+ years

  8. Treating Substance Abuse in Offender Populations

  9. Theory • Why is “theory” important? • Theory and Substance Abuse • Social learning theory • Biology/genetics • Low self-control • General Strain Theory • Self-esteem/other issues? • Is Substance Abuse a “Disease” or a “Behavioral Problem”

  10. Assessment • How is “abuse” or “use” assessed in a correctional environment? • Dependence (physiological, psychological) • Abuse (extent to which it creates problems) • LSI • Law violations, marital/family problems, school/work, medical problems, other • Why is assessment important? • How are assessment scores used?

  11. Models for Rx • Psychodynamic • Radical Behavioral • Aversion (Covert Sensitization) • Operant conditioning (tokens, contracting, etc.) • Cognitive Behavioral • Cognitive restructuring • Cognitive skills • Therapeutic Communities • Family Therapies (“Intervention”)

  12. Relapse Prevention • Another “skill” acquired via social learning • Identify all of the problems substance use causes • Identify high risk situations • Identify coping strategies for each situation • Succeeding in high risk situations builds self-efficacy • Be careful of “Abstinence Violation Effect” • Lapse snowballs into total loss

  13. Self-Help/Support Groups • AA/NA, etc. • History • The “12 step model” • Spiritual, physical, mental disease • Admit a problem and acknowledge all the areas in your life you have affected, make amends, help others with disease… • Turn life over to “god” or similar being… • What does research tell us about these groups? • AA and the PEI • Points of agreement • Points of disagreement

  14. Pharmalogical Approaches • Harm reduction models • Like the Green Bay Packers’ offense, “You cannot stop it, you can only hope to contain it.” • Benefits of controlled use? • Methadone • Newest use is for methamphetamine users • Other examples • Needle exchanges • “Safe use” educational programs

  15. Responsivity Issues • General responsivity • Specific responsivity • Race • Gender • “Readiness” • Stage of change idea • Unique causes/consequences of problems • Use for….enjoyment, stress relief, • Problems = marital, employment…

  16. Effectiveness • What counts as failure (recidivism)? • Meta-analysis results • Most successful were… • Cognitive/behavioral (skills, contracting, relapse prevention…) • Least successful were • EDUCATIONAL APPROACHS LIKE D.A.R.E. • Dare to say no to D.A.R.E.

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