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Age and motivation can be specific responsivity features that moderate the relationship between risk and rehabilitation outcome

Authors :
Caleb D. Lloyd
Ralph C. Serin
Cole A Higley
Source :
Law and Human Behavior. 43:558-567
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Psychological Association (APA), 2019.

Abstract

Objective Specific responsivity features are not directly targeted in offender rehabilitation programs but may impact a client's receptivity. We investigated if two features may explain why high-quality correctional programs do not uniformly impact all high-risk, high-needs clients. Hypotheses The current study was exploratory. We hypothesized a relationship between higher static risk and poorer program outcomes and then explored if this relationship was attenuated by age and motivation. Method Program providers rated the performance of incarcerated males (n = 2,417, Mean age = 33.6, SD = 9.9, Range = 18-81) who attended one of six types of programs during incarceration (for general, violent, and sexual offenders). Using risk scores calculated at prison entry, we predicted performance and official record recidivism. Preprogram motivation and age were moderators. Results Five of 24 exploratory multilevel models revealed an attenuated relationship between risk and program outcome among older offenders (percent variance explained = 17.9% within violence groups; 11.5% within living skills groups; and a 9% difference in predicted recidivism rates among high-risk attendees of family violence groups) and offenders with higher preprogram motivation (percent variance explained = 43.6% within violence groups, and a 7% difference in predicted recidivism rates among high risk attendees in living skills groups). Conclusions Age and motivation can be specific responsivity features that may deserve attention in rehabilitation practice. However, observed effects may have been weakened by underdeveloped, single-indicator measurement strategies. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).

Details

ISSN :
1573661X and 01477307
Volume :
43
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Law and Human Behavior
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e21a3b402cc6f9f54aa3366ea48cffa9