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Journal Article

Citation

McMurran M, Huband N, Duggan C. Psychol. Psychother. 2008; 81(2): 193-198.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, British Psychological Society)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Background. In the treatment of offenders with personality disorders, one matter that requires attention is the rate of treatment non-completion. This is important as it has cost-efficiency and negative outcome implications.

Method. We compared the characteristics of those who participated in a personality disorder treatment programme divided into three groups: Group 1, treatment completers (N = 21); Group 2, those expelled for rule breaking (N = 16); and Group 3, those removed because they were not engaging in treatment (N = 19). We hypothesized that, compared with the other two groups, Group 2 would score higher on the impulsive/careless style scale, and that those in Group 3 would score higher on the avoidant style scale of the social problem-solving inventory-revised (SPSI-R). Further, we hypothesized that high anxiety would be associated with treatment non-completion in both the groups.

Results. These differences were not found. However, in combining both groups of non-completers for comparison, completers were shown to score significantly higher on SPSI-R rational problem solving and significantly lower on SPSI-R impulsive/careless style.

Conclusion. Findings suggest that teaching impulsive people a rational approach to social problem solving may reduce their level of non-completion.

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