Transcript
Page 1: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex

Offender Research Projects

R. Karl HansonPublic Safety Canada

Presentation at the 13th Annual Conference of the NYATSA, Saratoga Springs, NY, May 14, 2008

Page 2: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

Big Questions

• Impact of criminal justice and social policy interventions (e.g., community notification, residency restrictions, civil commitment, risk assessment)

• Assessment of reduced risk in high risk offenders

• Active components in sexual offender treatment

• Social policy for prevention on onset

Page 3: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

Evaluation of

Sex Offender Treatment Programs

Page 4: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

Collaborative Outcome Data Committee

• Formed in 1997

Goals:– Define standards for research on treatment

outcome for sexual offenders (develop consensus)

– Organize existing sexual offender outcome studies

– Promote high quality evaluations

Page 5: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

CODC contributors

• Anthony Beech• Darren Bisshop• Guy Bourgon• Dawn Fisher• R. Karl Hanson• Andrew Harris• Calvin Langton• Roxanne Lieb

• Janice Marques• Michael Miner• William Murphy• Michael Seto• Vernon Quinsey• David Thornton• Pamela Yates

Page 6: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

CODC Study Quality Guidelines

• Structured rating scale

• Definition of study quality – “…judgement of minimal bias can be made with high

confidence.”

• 20 items (plus 1 additional item rated for cross-institutional designs)– Items fall under 7 categories– Items assess either confidence OR bias (including direction of

bias)

Page 7: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

I) Administrative control of independent variables

• Defining treatment (confidence)

• Defining comparison group (confidence)

• Miscellaneous incidental factors (bias)

Page 8: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

II) Experimenter expectancies

• Experimenter involvement (bias)

• Blinding in data management (bias)

Page 9: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

III) Sample size

• Sample size of treatment (confidence)

• Sample size of comparison (confidence)

• Sample size of institutions (confidence) (for cross-institutional designs only)

Page 10: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

IV) Attrition

• Subject selection (bias)

• Program attrition (bias)

• Intent-to-treat (bias)

• Attrition in follow-up (bias)

Page 11: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

V) Equivalency of groups

• A priori equivalency of groups (bias)

• Adequacy of search of differences (confidence)

• Findings on group differences (bias)

Page 12: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

VI) Outcome variables

• Length of follow-up (confidence)

• Validity/reliability of recidivism information (confidence)

• Equivalency of follow-up (bias)

Page 13: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

VII) Correct comparison conducted

• Data dredging (confidence)

• Effectiveness of statistical controls (confidence)

• Computation of least bias comparison (bias)

Page 14: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

Global Rating• All items considered in making overall

judgment of bias and confidence – Same three-point scales as individual

items

• Bias and confidence are considered separately

Page 15: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

Global Rating Categories• Strong

– High confidence AND negligible bias

• Good– High confidence and some bias, OR– Some confidence and negligible bias

• Weak– Some confidence and some bias

• Reject– Little confidence, OR– Considerable bias

Page 16: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

Reliability Study 1: Students

• 2 senior undergrad students

• Approximately one week training (8 practice studies)

• 10 real studies rated independently

Page 17: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

Results: Global Ratings

• Overall 9/10 (ICC = 0.95)

• Global confidence 10/10 (ICC = 1.00)

• Global bias 9/10 (ICC = 0.69)• Direction of bias 7/10

Page 18: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

Reliability Study 2: Experts

• 12 Experts in sex offender research evaluation• No training on guidelines• 10 hypothetical studies ranging in quality • Rated 1-6 studies each (3 ratings per study)

Page 19: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

Expert Raters

• Guy Bourgon• Andrew Harris• Grant Harris• Niklas Langstrom• Roxanne Lieb• Ruth Mann

• Robert McGrath• William Murphy• Vernon Quinsey• Marnie Rice• David Thornton• Pamela Yates

Page 20: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

Expert Reliability

– Some agreement on individual items

– No agreement on global ratings

Page 21: Researching Sex Offenders: A Workshop on Conceptualizing and Implementing Sex Offender Research Projects R. Karl Hanson Public Safety Canada Presentation

www.publicsafety.gc.ca

• Collaborative Data Outcome Committee. (2007). Sex offender treatment outcome research: Guidelines for Evaluation (CODC Guidelines). Part 1: Introduction and overview. Corrections User Report No 2007-02. Ottawa: Public Safety Canada.

• Collaborative Data Outcome Committee. (2007). The Collaborative Outcome Data Committee’s Guidelines for the evaluation of sexual offender treatment outcome research. Part 2: CODC Guidelines. Corrections User Report No 2007-03. Ottawa: Public Safety Canada.


Recommended