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Clinical Risk Assessment Wallace Brink StR Forensic Psychiatry Langdon Hospital Student who killed mother and unborn twins sent to Rampton Saturday Telegraph May 6th 2006 Definitions Risk: the likelihood of an adverse event. Risk Factors: features associated with increased risk. Risk Assessment: an estimation of the likelihood of particular adverse events occurring under particular circumstances. Within a specified period of time. Risk Formulation: organisation of the risk data to facilitate risk management. Risk Management: organised attempts to minimise the likelihood of adverse events Risk Depends on the individual and the context Objective Dynamic Not equal to DANGEROUSNESS Not dangerous 1---5---10 Very dangerous Types of risk assessment Clinical assessment Unstructured or clinical Structured (e.g. HCR 20) Actuarial approach Clinical Risk Assessment Awareness that risk is dynamic Adopt a structured approach Explicit working Consider protective factors as well as risk factors Clinical Risk Assessment Gather necessary information Keep good records Communicate your assessment Base your interventions on the risk assessment Practical and Systematic Gather information from: The individual being assessed Others who know them Records Take a full history Consider the risks involved Is there a risk of harm? What sort of harm? What degree? Who is at risk? How likely is it that harm will occur? What is its immediacy? How long will the risk last? What are the factors which contribute to the risk? How can the factors be modified or managed? What is the relationship between risks? Absconding Non compliance Substance use Mental state deterioration Physical assault McNeil et al 2003 Clinical factors may be most relevant for the estimation of short term risk in acutely ill patients Historical factors may be most relevant for estimating the long-term risk in treated patients ECA Study: Swanson 1990 Major mental disorder: 5 fold increase in violence compared to those without major mental disorder (10-13% verses 2%) Substance misuse: 10 fold increase in violence compared to non-drug users (19-35% verses 2%) Birth Cohort Study: Hodgins (1992) Odds Ratio of 4 for violence among men with major mental illness compared with controls Odds Ratio of 27 for violence among women with major mental illness compared with controls Other factors associated with violence Male gender, young age, low socio-economic status Male gender, young age, low educational level Swanson, 1990 Link, 1992 Discharge to poverty Silver et al 1999 MacArthur Violence Risk Assessment Study: Steadman 1998 Prospective 1 year follow up of 1000 discharged patients compared to community controls for levels of violence No association found between mental illness and violence May be indication of the success of risk management Summary of violence literature Substance misuse is a major risk factor with or without mental disorder Socio-demographic factors contribute significantly Contribution of mental illness is relatively small Accuracy of clinical assessment Link 1993: predictions in emergency room patients correct 1 in 2 attempts clinicians significantly underestimated risk in women if used just the historical data on the same patients the sensitivity increased at the expense of the specificity Mulvey and Lidz 1998 Asked doctors to predict which of the patients assessed in the ER would be violent The clinicians did reasonably well in predicting place, target, severity of violence and involvement of alcohol in violence Clinicians overestimated the influence of noncompliance and drug misuse upon risk of violence Violence is relatively rare and consequently accurate prediction is difficult Monahan grid Personal / dispositional (static) Historical (static) Contextual (dynamic) Clinical (dynamic) Personal / dispositional Demographic Personality Neuropsychological Physical Historical Family and personal history Work and education Psychosexual development PPH and PMH Previous offending and antisocial behaviour Contextual Level of support and supervision (actual and perceived) Availability of victim / weapons / substances Perceived stress Interests (sexual, violence, cruelty, racial) Clinical Delusions, hallucinations, passivity Depression, mania Anger/rage, impulse control Paranoid disposition, jealousy Fantasies Personality disorder Substance use Risk of violence to others: victim Relationship to perpetrator Particular characteristics Vulnerability Availability Mullen’s approach Mullen P. Dangerousness, Risk and the Prediction of Probability. The New Oxford Textbook of Psychiatry. (Eds M.G. Gelder, J.J. Lopez-Ibor and N.C. Andreasen). Chapter 11.4.3. Oxford. Pre-existing vulnerabilities Increase Male Young Disrupted or abusive Childhood Antisocial Suspicious Impulsive Irritable Decrease Over 35 years of age Good pre-morbid personality Stable/nurturing childhood Sensible Social and Interpersonal factors Increase Poor social network Lack of education Lack of work skills Rootless Poverty Homelessness Decrease Good social network Stable accommodation Employment A confidante Supportive intimate relationship Mental Disorder Increase Active symptoms Poor compliance Poor engagement with services Treatment resistance Lack of insight Decrease Absence of active symptoms Good compliance Good engagement Good treatment response Good insight Substance Misuse Increase Present Decrease Absent State of Mind Increase Anger/fear Threats Delusions Evoking fear Provoking indignation Provoking jealousy Involving jealousy Involving injury/threat from close relative or companion Clouding consciousness and confusion Ideas of influence Command hallucinations Decrease Amotivational Situational Triggers Availability of weapons Loss Demands and expectations Confrontation Change Physical illness Other provocation Good risk assessment Reviewed on a regular basis Reviewed if there are new concerns Multi-disciplinary In collaboration with the patient and their carer Limitations of your assessment noted Includes factors which reduce risk of future violence Only useful if disseminated Informs the management plan Define the risk Severity best predicted by prior violence Imminence best predicted by pattern of violence statements, life circumstances. Likelihood best predicted by actuarial models Dvoskin and Heilbrun 2001 Homicide Inquiries: why do things go wrong Failure to lend sufficient weight to reports by carers and members of the public about disturbed behaviour An undue emphasis on the civil liberties of patients at the expense of increased risk of suicide or of violent behaviour A failure to properly implement the MHA A tendency to take cross-sectional rather than longterm view of the risk of suicide or violence A failure to share information in the best interests of the patient W v Egdell [1990] Duty of confidence to the patient is not absolute Balance between the interest in confidentiality and in public safety Thoroughness Attention to detail Accurate and detailed record keeping Comprehensive history taking Avoid minimising incidents Linking incidents “Asking the unaskable” Multi Agency public protection arrangements MAPPA Offenders who pose a risk of serious harm to others Level 1: Caused serious harm previously, manageable by a single agency Level 2: Pose a serious risk to others but not an imminent risk Level 3: Pose and imminent and serious risk Interagency working Healthcare Social Services Housing departments Police Probation Day centres/hostels The defendable decision Take all reasonable steps Use reliable assessment methods Seek information you do not have Thoroughly evaluate all relevant information Stay within agency policies and procedures Record and account for decision making Communicate the plan to others involved Risk Management: CPA Actions to minimise the hazards Actions to enhance protective factors Review date Contingency plan to include Arrangements for when the co-coordinator is unavailable Arrangements for when part of the care plan can not be provided Crisis plan to include: Action to be taken if mental state is rapidly deteriorating Positive risk management involves Weighing up the potential benefits and harms Plans which support the positive potentials and minimise the risks An element of risk because the potential positive benefits outweigh the risks HCR-20 ASSESSING RISK FOR VIOLENCE VERSION 2 - 1997 Christopher D. Webster Kevin S. Douglas Derek Eaves Stephen D. Hart Mental Health, Law, and Policy Institute Simon Fraser University Scope & Purpose “The main aim was to produce a guide which would be rooted in scientific knowledge… be defined precisely,… and be designed for efficiency with time constraints in mind” General Principles for Improving Prediction Accuracy “What exactly is the referral question?” “Opinions formed about risk under one set of circumstances (e.g., risk for violence in the community) may have limited pertinence to another set (e.g., violence while institutionalised).” “Clinicians who have been seeing patients for psychotherapy may wish to decline offering assessments of risk for such patients” “Very hurried or pressured assessment, or those based on partial information, invite inaccuracy” “The scientific knowledge from which the assessment is formulated should be current” General Principles for Improving Prediction Accuracy 2 “The particular scheme chosen should correspond as closely as possible to the type of population from which the assessee is drawn” “Whenever possible, the base-rate of violence in pertinent populations should be obtained or estimated. It is important that this base rate, which may be quite low in some populations, guide the eventual statement of risk” “Particular importance should be ascribed to historical considerations, which should anchor such modifications as might be suggested by analyses of clinical and situational factors… Cross-checking of information is crucial at every step” Organisation of the HCR-20 “An important aspect of the HCR-20 is that it includes variables which capture relevant past, present, and future considerations. Historical, or static factors are weighted as heavily as the combined present clinical and future risk management variables” 20 item structure: Historical – 10 past history factors Clinical – 5 present variables Risk Management – 5 future issues Administration “Current research is revealing the necessity of multiple sources of information in making risk assessments… A thorough and thoughtful review of all available files must be completed” “Assessors ought to include in their reports all sources which they did consult, did not consult, or were unable to consult” Defining Violence “Violence is actual, attempted, or threatened harm to a person or persons… Violence is behaviour which obviously is likely to cause harm to another person or persons… In a general sense, then acts which are serious enough to result in criminal or civil sanctions, or for which the perpetrator could have been charged, should be considered violent, and those that are not as serious as this should not be considered violent… All sexual assaults should be considered violent behaviour.” Historical (Past) Clinical (Present) H1. Previous Violence H2. Young Age at First Violent Incident H3. Relationship Instability H4. Employment Problems H5. Substance Use Problems H6. Major Mental Illness H7. Psychopathy H8. Early Malajustment H9. Personality Disorder H10. Prior Supervision Failure C1. Lack of Insight C2. Negative Attitudes C3. Active Symptoms of Major Mental Illness C4. Impulsivity C5. Unresponsive to Treatment Risk Management (Future) R1. Plans Lack Feasibility R2. Exposure to Destabilisers R3. Lack of Personal Support R4. Noncompliance with Remediation Attempts R5. Stress Coding Items No The item definitely is absent or does not apply. Maybe The item possibly is present, or is present only to a limited extent. Yes The item definitely is present. Omit Don’t Know – There is insufficient valid information to permit a decision concerning the presence of absence of the item. H1. Previous Violence +/- + No previous violence Possible / less serious previous violence (one or two acts of moderately severe violence) Definite / serious previous violence (three or more acts of violence, or any acts of severe violence) The scoring scheme here is intended to capture the density of previous violence. For this reason the number of past violent acts is combined with the severity of past violence to determine the score… All violence which occurs up to and including the time of assault is included as “previous violence”. H2. Young Age at First Violent Incident +/+ 40 years and older at first know violent act Between 20 and 39 years at first know violent act Under 20 years at first known violent act We are aware that, in general, the younger a person was at his or her first act of violence, the greater is the probability of future violence… Age is established by considering the date of the first known violent incident, and not using the date of the index offence or assessment. H3. Relationship Instability +/+ Relatively stable and conflict-free relationship pattern Possible / less serious unstable and / or conflictual relationship pattern Definite / serious unstable and / or conflictual relationship pattern This item applies only to ‘romantic’, intimate, or non-platonic partnerships, and excludes relationships with friends and family. The item is geared toward whether an individual show evidence of having the ability to form and maintain stable long-term relationships, and engages in these when given the opportunity. “Instability” may show in several ways: many short-term relationships; absence of any relationships; presence of conflict within long-term relationships. H4. Employment Problems +/+ No employment problems Possible / less serious employment problems Definite / serious employment problems Individuals who warrant a high score on this item may refuse to seek legitimate employment, or have a history of having many jobs within short-term periods, or of frequently being fired or quitting. The primary focus of this item is the presence or absence of employment problems. H5. Substance Use Problems +/+ No substance use problems Possible / less serious substance use problems Definite / serious substance use problems The assessor is interested in whether there exists impairment of functioning in areas of health, employment, recreation, and interpersonal relationships which is attributable to substances. H6. Major Mental Illness +/+ No major mental illness Possible / less serious major mental illness Definite / serious major mental illness A diagnosis of major mental illness should conform to an official nosological system such as the DSM-IV or ICD-10. This item is scored on the basis of past history and is unaffected by whether the disorder is currently active or in remission. This item applies to illnesses involving disturbances of thought and affect (e.g., psychotic illnesses, manic mood illnesses, organic illnesses, retardation, etc.). H7. Psychopathy +/+ Nonpsychopathic Possible / less serious psychopathy Definite / serious psychopathy It must be stressed that this rating is to be made on the basis of an informed and trained psychopathy assessment using the PCL-R or PCL:SV. It may be appropriate to modify the scoring ranges according to local (e.g. UK) populations. H8. Early Maladjustment +/+ No maladjustment Possible / less serious maladjustment Definite / serious maladjustment This item includes two very different ways in which childhood maladjustment predicts later violence. One way is through childhood victimisation, the other through being a childhood victimiser… Although both factors predict adult violence, they clearly have different implications for intervention. H9. Personality Disorder +/+ No personality disorder Possible / less serious personality disorder Definite / serious personality disorder A diagnosis of personality disorder should conform to an official nosological system such as the DSM-IV (APA, 1994), or the ICD10 (WHO, 1992). H10. Prior Supervision Failure +/+ No supervision failure(s) Possible / less serious supervision failure(s) Definite / serious supervision failure(s) Failures during any institutional or community placement are relevant here. A supervision failure is considered to be serious if it resulted in the individual being (re-)apprehended or (re-) institutionalised by a correctional or mental health agency. Clinical Items “Although historical items have the strongest support in terms of predictive acumen, there is no dearth of well-established clinical constructs that may be relevant to the assessment of risk.” C1. Lack of Insight +/+ No lack of insight Possible / less serious lack of insight Definite / serious lack of insight This item refers to the degree to which the assess fails to acknowledge and comprehend his or her mental disorder, and its effect on others. C2. Negative Attitudes +/+ No negative attitudes Possible / less serious negative attitudes Definite / serious negative attitudes We here refer to the kind of pro-criminal and antisocial attitudes that have some likelihood of eventuating in violence. C3. Active Symptoms of Major Mental Illness +/+ No active symptoms of major mental illness Possible / less serious active symptoms of major mental illness Definite / serious active symptoms of major mental illness Assessors should follow a classification system, such as the DSMIV (APA, 1994) or ICD-10 (WHO, 1992). C4. Impulsivity +/+ No impulsivity Possible / less serious impulsivity Definite / serious impulsivity Impulsivity refers to dramatic hour-to-hour, day-to-day, or weekto-week fluctuations in mood or general demeanour… Impulsive persons are quick to (over-) react to real and imagined slights, insults, and disappointments. C5. Unresponsive to Treatment 0 1 2 Responsive to treatment Possible / less serious unresponsiveness to treatment Definite / serious unresponsiveness to treatment This item includes any treatment designed to ameliorate criminal, psychiatric, psychological, social, or vocational problems. It does not refer to treatments which are largely irrelevant to criminal or psychiatric tendencies. Risk Management Items “This section centres on forecasting how individuals will adjust to future circumstances. Although admittedly speculative, the exercise serves to stimulate development of appropriate risk management plans.” R1. Plans Lack Feasibility +/+ Low probability that plans will not work Moderate probability that plans will not work High probability that plans will not work Lack of feasibility may be due to the fact that community agencies are unwilling or unable to provide assistance. Alternatively, the patient may have played no role in making plans or be uninvolved with peers or family. R2. Exposure to Destabilisers +/+ Low probability of exposure to destabilisers Moderate probability of exposure to destabilisers High probability of exposure to destabilisers In large part, persons may be exposed to destabilisers because of inadequate professional supervision. R3. Lack of Personal Support +/+ Low probability of lack of personal support Moderate probability of lack of personal support High probability of lack of personal support This item can be coded present if support (emotional, financial, or physical) from friends or family is unavailable, or if such support is available but the individual is unwilling to accept it. R4. Non-compliance with Remediation Attempts +/+ Low probability of non-compliance with remediation attempts Moderate probability of non-compliance with remediation attempts High probability of non-compliance with remediation attempts Individuals who score high on this item may lack motivation to succeed and willingness to comply with medication and therapy, or refuse to follow rules. R5. Stress +/+ Low probability of stress Moderate probability of stress High probability of stress This item can be coded present if the individual is likely to be exposed to serious stressors. Alternatively, the anticipated stressors may be less serious, but the assessor is concerned that the individual will cope poorly with them. HCR 20: scenarios Nature Motivation Victims Severity Imminence Frequency Duration of risk Likelihood Risk-enhancing factors Risk-protective factors Monitoring Treatment Supervision Victim safety planning References Guideline for clinical risk assessment and management in mental health services. Ministry of Health (New Zealand) 1998 Dangerousness, Risk and the Prediction of Probability. Mullen P. The New Oxford Textbook of Psychiatry. (Eds M.G. Gelder, J.J. Lopez-Ibor and N.C. Andreasen). Chapter 11.4.3. Oxford. The state of contemporary risk assessment research. Norko MA and Baranoski MV. Can J Psychiatry (50) 1, 18-26. Best Practice in Managing Risk. Department of Health June 2007 Rethinking risk to others in mental health services. Final report of a scoping group. June 2008. RCPsych. ‘Giving up the Culture of Blame’Risk assessment and risk management in psychiatric practice. February 2007. RCPsych Risk assessment. A word to the wise. Vinstock M. APT (1996) 2, 310 Evaluating risks. Kapur N. APT (2000) 6, 399-406 Assessing risk of interpersonal violence in the mentally ill. Mullen P. APT (1997) 3, 166-173. “Prediction is very difficult, especially about the future” Niels Bohr (1885-1962)