Diagnostic labeling in juvenile justice settings: Do psychopathy and conduct disorder findings influence clinicians?
In: Psychological services, Band 4, Heft 2, S. 107-122
ISSN: 1939-148X
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In: Psychological services, Band 4, Heft 2, S. 107-122
ISSN: 1939-148X
In: Sexual abuse: official journal of the Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers (ATSA), Band 29, Heft 6, S. 592-614
ISSN: 1573-286X
We surveyed evaluators who conduct sexually violent predator evaluations ( N = 95) regarding the frequency with which they use the Psychopathy Checklist–Revised (PCL-R), their rationale for use, and scoring practices. Findings suggest that evaluators use the PCL-R in sexually violent predator cases because of its perceived versatility, providing information about both mental disorder and risk. Several findings suggested gaps between research and routine practice. For example, relatively few evaluators reported providing the factor and facet scores that may be the strongest predictors of future offending, and many assessed the combination of PCL-R scores and sexual deviance using deviance measures (e.g., paraphilia diagnoses) that have not been examined in available studies. There was evidence of adversarial allegiance in PCL-R score interpretation, as well as a "bias blind spot" in PCL-R and other risk measure (Static-99R) scoring; evaluators tended to acknowledge the possibility of bias in other evaluators but not in themselves. Findings suggest the need for evaluators to carefully consider the extent to which their practices are consistent with emerging research and to be attuned to the possibility that working in adversarial settings may influence their scoring and interpretation practices.