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Remaking Relapse Prevention

Remaking Relapse Prevention. “Determinants of Relapse” ( Marlatt & Gordon, 1980) New type of cognitive-behavioral intervention Relapse prevention. Relapse prevention. Maintaining change in addicts Ceased Through other interventions. Relapse Rates for Addictions.

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Remaking Relapse Prevention

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  1. Remaking Relapse Prevention

  2. “Determinants of Relapse” (Marlatt & Gordon, 1980) New type of cognitive-behavioral intervention Relapse prevention

  3. Relapse prevention Maintaining change in addicts Ceased Through other interventions

  4. Relapse Rates for Addictions First 12 months after cessation 80% First 3 months 66% (Hunt et al., 1971)

  5. Negative emotional states Interpersonal conflict Social pressure 71% of all relapses (drinkers, smokers, heroin addicts, compulsive gamblers, and over eaters) (Cummings et al, 1980)

  6. Deviant Cycle Life Event Negative Affect Remorse, Guilt, or Fear Seemingly Unimportant Decisions (SUDS) Offense Thinking Errors Grooming or Force High Risk Situations Planning Passive/Active Target Selection

  7. Developed for Offenders motivated to change Already ceased offending Offended through “seemingly unimportant decisions”

  8. Not Developed For Psychopaths Child molesters who want to continue

  9. “An important precondition for applying RP interventions is that the offender be motivated to stop offending.” (George & Marlatt, 1980, p. 16)

  10. In the Beginning “the confidence and optimism we feel . . . are quite strong . . . “our confidence . . . is without empirical support” (Gordon & Marlatt, p. 28)

  11. What is RP today? “Relapse Prevention” Has little meaning “In the past 15 years, those words have served as an umbrella under which a huge variety of clinical interventions that had little or nothing to do with the original notions of RP could be found.” (Laws, 2000, 0. 16)

  12. Nationwide Survey RP Includes Primary RP • Community 18% 97.9% • Residential 25% 93.4% (McGrath et al., 2002)

  13. Cognitive Behavioral Treatment • Empathy • Assertiveness • Social skills • Healthy sexuality • Intimacy training • Cognitive distortions • Cognitive skills • Relapse Prevention

  14. “Relapse prevention “performed a deep alchemy through which clinicians could look at rapidly declining survival curves and see mission, not despair.” (Hanson, 2000, p. 36)

  15. Instilling Knowledge of RP Satisfactory offense chains Initial testing 39% 3 repetitions 100% (Marques et al., 1989)

  16. Test of Basic RP Concepts Initial testing 34% 3rd testing 100% (Marques et al., 1989)

  17. Sex Offender Treatment and Evaluation Project(Marques, 1999)

  18. Why Was RP Adopted So Readily? No other game in town Northwest Treatment Associates Seattle, WA Gene Able & associates NY/Atlanta

  19. Was SOTEP a Test of RP? • Sex education • Human sexuality • Relaxation training • Stress & anger management • Social skills • Substance abuse • Deviant arousal • RP

  20. SOTEP Chronic offenders Mastered RP model Lower recidivism rates All offenders No relationship Mastering RP & recidivism

  21. RP & Low Risk Offenders SOTEP Mastering RP No lowered recidivism No cycle?

  22. Why Did SOTEP Fail? Failure to motivate offenders Lack of challenge of offenders Too little focus on affective factors Lack of practice in coping skills Lack of a strong conditional release component

  23. Instilling Knowledge of RP Community based tx in England 27%

  24. RP Too Complicated • Abstinence violation effect • Success expectancy • Erroneous attributions • Apparently irrelevant decisions • Negative emotional state • Problem of immediate gratification • Adaptive coping response • Increased probability of relapse

  25. RP Can Be Taught • Awareness of high-risk thoughts • Willingness to admit planning • Recognition of high risk factors • Knowledge of motivation for offending • Ability to think of coping strategies • Ability to tell others when at risk Exposure to RP greater skills (Mann, 1996)

  26. Summary RP dominant tx strategy for 15 years Rarely as a solo program Hard to teach When mastered, ability to think of coping strategies and tell others risk level

  27. Losel & Schmucker2005

  28. Negative Results Kenworthy, Adams, Brooks-Gordon & Fenton, 2004 Rice and Harris, 2003

  29. Does Tx Work Long Term? 12 Year Follow-Up Treated Untreated (403) (321) Sexual 21.1% 21.8 Violent 42.9% 44.5% General 56.6% 60.4% (Hanson et al., 2004)

  30. Updated Relapse Prevention

  31. Deviant Cycle Life Event Negative Affect Remorse, Guilt, or Fear Seemingly Unimportant Decisions (SUDS) Offense Thinking Errors Grooming or Force High Risk Situations Planning Passive/Active Target Selection

  32. Self Regulation Model of Relapse Prevention Life Event Sometimes Desire for Offensive Sex (Ward & Hudson, 1998)

  33. Self Regulation Model of Relapse Prevention Desire for Offensive Sex Avoidance Goals Approach Goals (Ward & Hudson, 1998)

  34. Treatment Components

  35. Agenda RP & Good Lives Minimal Arousal Conditioning Denial Role of Family Treatment

  36. A. “We weighed it up and made sure that each unit weighed a kilo and did a general purity test on it. Q. How do you do a general purity test? A. Well, we snorted a bunch of it.”

  37. “The Court: “Now you are entitled to a speedy and public trial by jury or by court. You know what a jury trial is?” Defendant: “Yes” Court: “What’s a jury trial?” Defendant: “A jury trial, twelve people find you guilty.” Court. Yeah that is about right.”

  38. Court: “You were picked up on a new 245?” Defendant: “I don’t know if it was a 245, 645, 345. They picked me up on something, all right? Okay? Then when they also had me on that, he gave me a motherfucking charge for prostitution.” Counsel: “Don’t use language like that to the judge.” Defendant: Prostitution? What? Prostitution? What do you want me to say? They picked me up for prostitution.”

  39. Police Report “I observed defendant driving without headlights on. Defendant’s vehicle was swaying from westbound curb lane to eastbound # 1. As defendant’s vehicle passed, I observed defendant with a large dog helping defendant drive (dog had front paws on steering wheel, possibly trying to save its own life.). Upon stopping defendant’s vehicle, defendant began yelling, ‘Fuck Skippy [the dog]. You really got me fucked this time.’ Skippy had no statement.”

  40. Self Regulation Model of Relapse Prevention Avoidant Approach Passive Active Automatic Explicit (Ward & Hudson, 1998)

  41. Type of Offense Pathway: Roger • Unemployed • Bar from 12 to 3 pm • Left drunk • Boarded a train as “knew girls would be there” • Goals: get one to perform oral sex

  42. Type of Offense Pathway: Roger Sat behind two 13-year-olds Touched their hair and masturbated Tapped one on shoulder They got up and left Got off train, saw a 13-year-old Began masturbating

  43. Type of Offense Pathway: Roger • Walked up to her with penis out of pants • Wanted her to perform oral sex • She called out and other girls joined her • Bus arrived and they left • They reported to bus driver

  44. Type of Offense Pathway: Roger “I just do things for no reason.” “I wish I could put into words how I feel, and understand what it is all about.”

  45. Type of Offense Pathway: Roger • Knew by heart the routes home of children from local schools and holidays and breaks • It was “familiar territory” so never had to plan • Says “thousands” of victims • Convicted 13 times

  46. Type of Offense Pathway: Roger • Says he felt children enjoyed the experience • “I don’t hurt anyone and people quite like what I do. I never carry out my fantasies about rape and hurting people in real life.”

  47. Roger: What Kind of Offender? Approach Automatic

  48. What Kind of Treatment?

  49. Type of Offense Pathway: Dave • 40 year-old • Confident and outgoing • Worked abroad in a program to help teen prostitutes • Talked to pimps • They made a “powerful case” • Felt his values had “become contaminated”

  50. Type of Offense Pathway: Dave “Some of the younger girls I was trying to help said that things about the life were good. Intellectually I knew that that was about comparisons with the life they had before, extreme poverty and so on, but at another level I got interested – although I never did anything wrong to them.”

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