2010
DOI: 10.1080/14789940903388978
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A descriptive evaluation of patients and prisoners assessed for dangerous and severe personality disorder

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Cited by 39 publications
(25 citation statements)
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References 9 publications
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“…The most common personality disorder diagnoses excluding antisocial personality disorder were borderline and paranoid. The Chromis Downloaded by [University of Regina] at 09:36 18 November 2014 population is largely consistent with the wider DSPD population as reported by Kirkpatrick et al (2009) although Chromis appears to work with significantly more indeterminate sentenced prisoners, with the wider DSPD population being reported to consist of 54% indeterminate sentenced prisoners (Kirkpatrick et al, 2009). This is a population who present a range of challenges to the criminal justice system and to the staff responsible for working with them.…”
Section: The Client Groupsupporting
confidence: 78%
“…The most common personality disorder diagnoses excluding antisocial personality disorder were borderline and paranoid. The Chromis Downloaded by [University of Regina] at 09:36 18 November 2014 population is largely consistent with the wider DSPD population as reported by Kirkpatrick et al (2009) although Chromis appears to work with significantly more indeterminate sentenced prisoners, with the wider DSPD population being reported to consist of 54% indeterminate sentenced prisoners (Kirkpatrick et al, 2009). This is a population who present a range of challenges to the criminal justice system and to the staff responsible for working with them.…”
Section: The Client Groupsupporting
confidence: 78%
“…The IPDE personality disorder assessment results confirmed what would be expected, namely, the majority in Cluster B had personality disorders (dramatic-erraticemotional) but there were also some with Cluster A and Cluster C personality disorders. The distribution of personality disorders was very similar to that reported by Kirkpatrick et al (2010). The proportion with Cluster A and C disorders was substantially greater at 30% than the 17% reported by Coid in a representative sample of all personality disorder admissions to medium-and high-secure hospitals in England and Wales (Coid, Kahtan, Gault, & Jarman, 1999).…”
Section: Clinical Characteristicssupporting
confidence: 69%
“…The final decisions about admission were guided by the agreed DSPD criteria (Kirkpatrick et al, 2010). More than three-quarters met these rigorous criteria at intake and more than half had this clearly recorded in their notes.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…According to a recent analysis of admissions, 91% had committed violent offences (homicide in over a third of cases) and 61% sexual offences; many had multiple previous convictions (Kirkpatrick et al, 2010). Although some basic operating criteria were laid down by the (then) Home Office, clinicians at each site were given the latitude to choose, which treatment model to adopt, provided -in this era of 'what works' in the reduction of reoffending -it had some evidence base.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%