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Recidivism in female offenders: PCL-R lifestyle factor and VRAG show predictive validity in a German sample

Recidivism in female offenders: PCL-R lifestyle factor and VRAG show predictive validity in a German sample
Recidivism in female offenders: PCL-R lifestyle factor and VRAG show predictive validity in a German sample
A clear and structured approach to evidence-based and gender-specific risk assessment of violence in female offenders is high on political and mental health agendas. However, most data on the factors involved in risk-assessment instruments are based on data of male offenders. The aim of the present study was to validate the use of the Psychopathy Checklist Revised (PCL-R), the HCR-20 and the Violence Risk Appraisal Guide (VRAG) for the prediction of recidivism in German female offenders. This study is part of the Munich Prognosis Project (MPP). It focuses on a subsample of female delinquents (n?=?80) who had been referred for forensic-psychiatric evaluation prior to sentencing. The mean time at risk was 8 years (SD?=?5 years; range: 1–18 years). During this time, 31% (n?=?25) of the female offenders were reconvicted, 5% (n?=?4) for violent and 26% (n?=?21) for non-violent re-offenses. The predictive validity of the PCL-R for general recidivism was calculated. Analysis with receiver-operating characteristics revealed that the PCL-R total score, the PCL-R antisocial lifestyle factor, the PCL-R lifestyle factor and the PCL-R impulsive and irresponsible behavioral style factor had a moderate predictive validity for general recidivism (area under the curve, AUC?=?0.66, p?=?0.02). The VRAG has also demonstrated predictive validity (AUC?=?0.72, p?=?0.02), whereas the HCR-20 showed no predictive validity. These results appear to provide the first evidence that the PCL-R total score and the antisocial lifestyle factor are predictive for general female recidivism, as has been shown consistently for male recidivists. The implications of these findings for crime prevention, prognosis in women, and future research are discussed
0735-3936
575-584
Eisenbarth, Hedwig
41af3dcb-da48-402b-a488-49de88e64f0c
Osterheider, Michael
307b1739-62bf-406a-b2d7-4e9f585043fd
Nedopil, Norbert
99810ca6-c902-4b50-8fed-e398e0012e82
Stadtland, Cornelis
57da4c89-9ea5-427b-94e8-a0ad6161b236
Eisenbarth, Hedwig
41af3dcb-da48-402b-a488-49de88e64f0c
Osterheider, Michael
307b1739-62bf-406a-b2d7-4e9f585043fd
Nedopil, Norbert
99810ca6-c902-4b50-8fed-e398e0012e82
Stadtland, Cornelis
57da4c89-9ea5-427b-94e8-a0ad6161b236

Eisenbarth, Hedwig, Osterheider, Michael, Nedopil, Norbert and Stadtland, Cornelis (2012) Recidivism in female offenders: PCL-R lifestyle factor and VRAG show predictive validity in a German sample. Behavioral Sciences & the Law, 30 (5), 575-584. (doi:10.1002/bsl.2013). (PMID:22718134)

Record type: Article

Abstract

A clear and structured approach to evidence-based and gender-specific risk assessment of violence in female offenders is high on political and mental health agendas. However, most data on the factors involved in risk-assessment instruments are based on data of male offenders. The aim of the present study was to validate the use of the Psychopathy Checklist Revised (PCL-R), the HCR-20 and the Violence Risk Appraisal Guide (VRAG) for the prediction of recidivism in German female offenders. This study is part of the Munich Prognosis Project (MPP). It focuses on a subsample of female delinquents (n?=?80) who had been referred for forensic-psychiatric evaluation prior to sentencing. The mean time at risk was 8 years (SD?=?5 years; range: 1–18 years). During this time, 31% (n?=?25) of the female offenders were reconvicted, 5% (n?=?4) for violent and 26% (n?=?21) for non-violent re-offenses. The predictive validity of the PCL-R for general recidivism was calculated. Analysis with receiver-operating characteristics revealed that the PCL-R total score, the PCL-R antisocial lifestyle factor, the PCL-R lifestyle factor and the PCL-R impulsive and irresponsible behavioral style factor had a moderate predictive validity for general recidivism (area under the curve, AUC?=?0.66, p?=?0.02). The VRAG has also demonstrated predictive validity (AUC?=?0.72, p?=?0.02), whereas the HCR-20 showed no predictive validity. These results appear to provide the first evidence that the PCL-R total score and the antisocial lifestyle factor are predictive for general female recidivism, as has been shown consistently for male recidivists. The implications of these findings for crime prevention, prognosis in women, and future research are discussed

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Accepted/In Press date: 8 May 2012
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 June 2012
Published date: September 2012
Organisations: Psychology

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Local EPrints ID: 384798
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/384798
ISSN: 0735-3936
PURE UUID: 052b5579-4482-4163-b94f-5209b5054b8a
ORCID for Hedwig Eisenbarth: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0521-2630

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Date deposited: 13 Jan 2016 09:53
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:51

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Contributors

Author: Hedwig Eisenbarth ORCID iD
Author: Michael Osterheider
Author: Norbert Nedopil
Author: Cornelis Stadtland

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