In Germany, the most frequently used legal section to order forensic mental health treatment is § 63 of the Penal Code (Strafgesetzbuch; StGB). This disposition is primarily aimed at individuals with major mental illnesses who are not fully responsible for a criminal act they committed. Despite evaluation and follow-up studies being conducted within individual hospitals or federal states we lack key epidemiological data on this patient group across the whole country. The present study aims to fill this gap by conducting an annual survey of all eligible forensic mental health hospitals to develop a database of basic clinical, legal and demographic data. Staff at participating hospitals will complete an online survey answering questions about individual patients using routinely collected hospital records. Over the duration of the study, eight-and-a-half years, we aim to collect data on approximately = 6,450 patients. Alongside important clinical data, we will use official reconviction data at 3- and 6-year follow-ups to investigate the number and types of crimes committed by discharged patients. We aim to extend the scientific literature on factors associated with reconviction in the Risk-Needs-Responsivity model by also measuring the extent to which treatment engagement and programme completion during care predicts reconviction. This study protocol describes the background and theoretical framework for this study, its methods of data collection and analysis, and steps taken to ensure compliance with ethical and data protection principles.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2022.827272 | DOI Listing |
J Law Med
November 2024
Associate Professor, La Trobe Law School, La Trobe University.
Risk assessment is an important component of judicial decision-making in many areas of the law. In Australia, those convicted of terrorist offences may be the subject of continued detention in prison or extended supervision in the community if there is an "unacceptable risk" of them committing future terrorism offences. Forensic psychologists and psychiatrists may provide evidence of risk through identifying and measuring risk factors with the aid of tools that use scales based on statistical or actuarial risk prediction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur Psychiatry
January 2025
Mental Health Services Noord-Holland-Noord, Alkmaar, the Netherlands; Dutch Clozapine Collaboration Group, Alkmaar, the Netherlands.
Background: Selective corticolimbic vulnerability to tau pathology in Alzheimer's disease (AD) underlies clinicopathologic heterogeneity. The goal of this presentation will be to examine spatial heterogeneity of tangle distribution on a continuum through the utility of the corticolimbic index (CLix).
Method: We will discuss the development of CLix in the Florida Autopsied Multi-Ethnic (FLAME) cohort, which sought to collapse the spatial distribution of thioflavin-S tangle counts in AD (n=1361) to assign a continuum: hippocampal sparing with cortical predominance (<10), representative/typical (≥10 to <30), and limbic predominant with cortical sparing (≥30).
Int J Ment Health Nurs
February 2025
Norfolk and Suffolk NHS Foundation Trust, Norwich, UK.
Health research authorities around the world are increasingly committed to embedding public involvement in health and social care research. However, such involvement in internationally published prison and forensic mental health research remains rare. It is therefore particularly important to understand how people are experiencing collaborative research in this field, barriers they may encounter and how these might be overcome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Females tend to exhibit more Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology and have more clinical symptoms compared to males with similar levels of pathology. Post-mortem studies in patients with AD have revealed that neuropathology is related to cognitive decline trajectories before death. However, what remains unclear is the intersection between sex differences in post-mortem pathology and cognitive decline.
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