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Journal Article

Citation

Yates PM. J. Child Sex. Abus. 2003; 12(3-4): 195-232.

Affiliation

Sex Offender Programs, Correctional Service of Canada, 340 Laurier Avenue West, Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0P9, Canada. yatespm@csc-scc.gc.ca

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1300/J070v12n03_08

PMID

15308452

Abstract

Recent research indicates that, of the various forms of treatment available to sexual offenders, cognitive-behavioural methods are likely to have the greatest impact in reducing rates of sexual re-offending. Cognitive-behavioural treatment typically targets attitudes that support sexual offending, anger management, victim empathy, deviant sexual arousal, and relapse prevention. More recently, treatment has targeted cognitive processes more generally, management of other emotional states in addition to anger, intimacy deficits, and risk self-management (Marshall, Anderson, & Fernandez, 1999; Yates, Goguen, Nicholaichuk, Williams, & Long, 2000). This article describes the components of cognitive-behavioural treatment with sexual offenders, including recent developments, assessment, treatment methods, and the importance of therapist characteristics on the therapeutic process and on treatment outcome.


Language: en

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