6 results match your criteria: "Clinical and Forensic Psychology Branch[Affiliation]"
Trauma Violence Abuse
December 2019
Centre for Research on Rehabilitation and Protection, Clinical and Forensic Psychology Branch, Ministry of Social and Family Development, Singapore, Singapore.
This study presents findings from three separate meta-analyses investigating differences between children placed in residential care and in family foster care with regard to three outcomes: internalizing behaviors, externalizing behaviors, and perception of care. Based on publications from the last 20 years, a total of 23 studies were included. The total sample consisted of 13,630 children in care, with 7,469 from foster care and 6,161 from residential care.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychiatr Psychol Law
November 2014
Ministry of Social and Family Development - Clinical and Forensic Psychology Branch, Singapore.
The Risk-Need-Responsivity (RNR) framework is regarded as the forefront of offender rehabilitation in guiding youth offender risk assessment and interventions. This article discusses the juvenile justice system in Singapore and the local research that has been conducted in relation to the RNR framework and the associated Youth Level of Service (YLS) measures. It describes a journey that saw the implementation of the RNR framework across the juvenile justice agencies and highlights the challenges that were faced during the implementation process on the ground.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychol Assess
September 2015
Probation Services Branch, Ministry of Social and Family Development.
Empirical support for the usage of the Youth Level of Service measures has been reported in studies conducted in the North America, United Kingdom, and Australia. Recent meta-analytic studies on the Youth Level of Service/Case Management Inventory (YLS/CMI) have revealed that the measure has modest to moderate predictive validity for general recidivism, but there are very few studies on the predictive validity of the YLS/CMI ratings for recidivism in non-Western contexts. This study examined the predictive validity of the YLS/CMI 2.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChild Abuse Negl
November 2014
Family and Child Protection and Welfare Branch, Ministry of Social and Family Development, Singapore.
This study examines the risk factors of re-entry for 1,750 child protection cases in Singapore using a cumulative ecological-transactional risk model. Using administrative data, the present study found that the overall percentage of Child Protection Service (CPS) re-entry in Singapore is 10.5% based on 1,750 cases, with a range from 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Ment Health Nurs
December 2013
Centre for Forensic Behavioural Science, School of Psychology and Psychiatry, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; Clinical and Forensic Psychology Branch, Ministry of Social and Family Development, Singapore.
Recent advancements in risk assessment have led to the development of dynamic risk-assessment measures that are predictive of inpatient aggression in the short term. However, there are several areas within this field that warrant further empirical investigation, including whether the average, maximum, or most recent risk state assessment is the most valid for predicting subsequent aggression in the medium term. This prospective study compared the predictive validity of three indices (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Forens Psychiatry Psychol
April 2012
Clinical and Forensic Psychology Branch, Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports , Singapore.
Aggressive behavior in incarcerated youth presents a significant problem for staff, co-residents and the functioning of the institution. This study aimed to examine the predictive validity of an empirically validated measure, designed to appraise the risk of imminent aggression within institutionalized adult psychiatric patients (Dynamic Appraisal of Situational Aggression; DASA), in adolescent male and female offenders. The supervising staff members on the residential units rated the DASA daily for 49 youth (29 males and 20 females) over two months.
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