The predictive validity of the HCR-20 following clinical implementation: does it work in practice?
The predictive validity of the HCR-20 following clinical implementation: does it work in practice?
This prospective study describes the predictive validity of the Historical Clinical Risk Management-20 Scale (HCR-20) when applied to clinical practice among 109 male mentally disordered offenders in a high secure forensic hospital. Data on violent incidents including reconvictions were collected from multiple sources. The results imply that the implemented HCR-20s did not predict future violence regardless of setting (community vs inpatient) nor time (short vs long term) except for serious incidents. This may indicate that the implemented HCR-20s informed risk management through systematic tailoring of care and treatment plans. Evidence supporting this interpretation was found in a reduction in violent incidents and offending when compared to an earlier study with a similar cohort. Alternatively, the completion of a violence risk assessment by clinicians rather than researchers may have affected the quality of completed assessments. Further research is required to better understand the complex mechanisms underlying the translation of identified risk factors into risk management.
forensic psychiatry, HCR-20, predictive validity, violence risk assessment
371-385
Vojt, Gabriele
20a2722e-e8b5-49e9-9f9f-01cf4e1b1387
Thomson, Lindsay D.G.
ada5baba-e0ce-463c-92f4-7ba95baa7d9c
Marshall, Lisa A.
f1d5a77b-b112-49b2-90f2-37e290a22aee
24 May 2013
Vojt, Gabriele
20a2722e-e8b5-49e9-9f9f-01cf4e1b1387
Thomson, Lindsay D.G.
ada5baba-e0ce-463c-92f4-7ba95baa7d9c
Marshall, Lisa A.
f1d5a77b-b112-49b2-90f2-37e290a22aee
Vojt, Gabriele, Thomson, Lindsay D.G. and Marshall, Lisa A.
(2013)
The predictive validity of the HCR-20 following clinical implementation: does it work in practice?
Journal of Forensic Psychiatry and Psychology, 24 (3), .
(doi:10.1080/14789949.2013.800894).
Abstract
This prospective study describes the predictive validity of the Historical Clinical Risk Management-20 Scale (HCR-20) when applied to clinical practice among 109 male mentally disordered offenders in a high secure forensic hospital. Data on violent incidents including reconvictions were collected from multiple sources. The results imply that the implemented HCR-20s did not predict future violence regardless of setting (community vs inpatient) nor time (short vs long term) except for serious incidents. This may indicate that the implemented HCR-20s informed risk management through systematic tailoring of care and treatment plans. Evidence supporting this interpretation was found in a reduction in violent incidents and offending when compared to an earlier study with a similar cohort. Alternatively, the completion of a violence risk assessment by clinicians rather than researchers may have affected the quality of completed assessments. Further research is required to better understand the complex mechanisms underlying the translation of identified risk factors into risk management.
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Published date: 24 May 2013
Keywords:
forensic psychiatry, HCR-20, predictive validity, violence risk assessment
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Local EPrints ID: 502383
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502383
ISSN: 1478-9949
PURE UUID: 38a5978c-bb11-41ef-8c84-3925328df39e
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Date deposited: 24 Jun 2025 16:45
Last modified: 25 Jun 2025 02:14
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Author:
Gabriele Vojt
Author:
Lindsay D.G. Thomson
Author:
Lisa A. Marshall
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