
@article{ref1,
title="Risk Assessment and Clinical Risk Management for Young Antisocial Children: The Forgotten Group",
journal="Universitas Psychologica",
year="2012",
author="Augimeri, Leena and Walsh, Margaret and Woods, Sarah and Jiang, Depeng",
volume="11",
number="4",
pages="1147-1156",
abstract="Centre for Children Committing Offences (CCCO), at Child Development Institute (CDI) in Toronto, Canada, developed Early Assessment Risk Lists (EARL-20B for boys; EARL-21G for girls), for young children at-risk for future criminality. In this first EARL prospective longitudinal study, 573 boys and 294 girls who participated in SNAP (R), a gender-specific evidence-based model for at-risk children (6-11 years), 8.2% of boys and 3.1% of girls had registered criminal offences at follow up (mean age 14.9 and 14.6 respectively). EARL Total, Family, Child, and Responsivity domain scores, including two gender-specific risk items and Overall Clinical Judgment predicted early onset of criminal activity. <br><br>FINDINGS suggest that gender-sensitive clinical risk assessment and management tools are important for effectively identifying and potentially reducing criminal outcomes.<p />",
language="",
issn="1657-9267",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}