keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38527155/a-literature-review-of-outcome-and-treatment-options-after-acquired-brain-injury-suggestions-for-adult-offenders-using-knowledge-from-the-general-population
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Esther Q J de Geus, Maarten V Milders, Joan E van Horn, Frank A Jonker, Thijs Fassaert, Juliette C Hutten, Femke Kuipers, Christel Grimbergen, Siri D S Noordermeer
BACKGROUND: Acquired brain injury (ABI) is a major health problem, often with negative effects on behaviour and mental health as well as cognition. Prevalence of ABI is exceptionally high among offenders and increases their re-offending risk. Information on risk factors for ABI and its outcomes among offenders that could guide effective treatment for them is, nevertheless, scarce and dispersed. However, there is a more substantial literature about the general population that could inform work with brain-injured offenders, especially when selecting for samples or subgroups with similar relevant characteristics, such as lower socio-economic status (SES), pre-injury lower tested intelligence score (<85) and pre-injury mental health problems...
March 25, 2024: Criminal Behaviour and Mental Health: CBMH
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38525195/suicide-risk-self-injury-and-sleep-an-exploration-of-the-associations-in-a-sample-of-juvenile-justice-involved-adolescents
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Selby M Conrad, Margaret Webb, Katelyn Affleck, Erik Hood, Kathleen Kemp
Court-involved youth living in the community represent a vulnerable, yet understudied, group that is at risk for a variety of concerning outcomes including increased suicidal ideation, suicide attempts, and non-suicidal self-injury (NSSI). Additionally, sleep disruption, which has been associated with an increase in impulsive decision making, appears to be disproportionately high in this population. However, little is known about any connection between poor sleep and increased suicide risk and NSSI in a group of youth...
2024: Journal of Forensic Psychology Research and Practice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38522118/men-after-the-sexual-assault-the-journey-from-medical-service-to-court
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Vanita R Parekh, Janine McMinn, Anna Brkic, Ash Byron, Katelyn Pomroy, Mick Woodburn
BACKGROUND: There may be significant physical and psychological consequences and impacts for males who experience sexual assault as adults, however, published literature in this context is sparse, specifically for the investigative outcomes in the criminal legal process. METHOD: This clinical audit tracked 138 adult males who presented for forensic and medical sexual assault care from initial presentation to ACT Police investigation and court outcome from 2004 to 2022...
March 19, 2024: Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38519874/nurses-experiences-of-racism-in-mental-health-settings-through-patient-and-family-interactions-a-systematic-review
#24
REVIEW
Anuson Wijayaratnam, Olga Kozlowska, Amani Krayem, Satinder Kaur, Helen Ayres, Rebecca Smith, Jane Paterson, Rola Moghabghab, Cathy Henshall
Nursing staff engage readily with patients and associates in mental health/forensic inpatient settings. These settings are known to have instances of workplace violence directed towards staff and such violence includes racism. Racism is a form of workplace violence that must be better understood and supported within this complex setting. Completing a systematic review to coalesce preexisting research and suggested interventions can be beneficial to supporting nurses. Systematic review following PRISMA guidelines...
March 22, 2024: International Journal of Mental Health Nursing
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38518570/detection-of-contraband-drugs-in-forensic-correctional-mental-health-services-using-teknoscan-a-gas-chromatography-tool
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrew T Olagunju, Aaron Wu, Jay Boudreau, Satyadev Nagari, John Mw Bradford, Gary A Chaimowitz
Substance misuse is a major problem among individuals involved in forensic-correctional mental health services. Urine drug screening detects substance use and deters the entry of contraband into forensic-correctional units, albeit with limitations. For example, a point-of-care urine sample may not be possible and patients can alter or substitute samples to avoid detection, highlighting the role of ancillary tools to detect contraband substances. This study describes the pattern and types of substances detected from environmental samples using a gas chromatographic analyzer (TeknoScan TSI3000) in forensic-correctional populations to model the benefits of similar tools in similar settings...
March 19, 2024: Forensic Science International
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38513445/-i-was-going-into-it-blind-nearest-relatives-legal-literacy-and-the-mental-health-act-1983
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Judy Laing, Jeremy Dixon, Kevin Stone
Eligible relatives are given rights and powers in the compulsory treatment of people with mental health problems in several international jurisdictions, including within England and Wales. However, little attention has been given to whether relatives feel legally literate or competent to fulfil such roles. This article examines this issue through focussing on the experiences of Nearest Relatives, who are given rights and powers during Mental Health Act 1983 (MHA) assessments for compulsory admission in England and Wales...
March 20, 2024: International Journal of Law and Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38509760/criminological-and-psychiatric-profiles-of-immigrant-and-refugee-offenders-a-retrospective-analysis-of-cases-in-a-forensic-setting
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Ilker Taşdemir, Muhammed Emin Boylu, Hızır Aslıyüksek, Sefa Saygılı, Kayıhan Oğuz Karamustafalıoğlu
This study aimed to scrutinize the characteristics of immigrant and refugee offenders within our institution, focusing on factors such as immigrant status, country of birth, duration of residence in Turkey, as well as psychiatric, socio-demographic, and criminal profiles. The data were obtained through a retrospective examination of case records referred to the Observation Department of the Council of Forensic Medicine for the assessment of criminal responsibility between 2017 and 2022. The study categorized the cases into two groups: refugees and immigrants, comprising 35 and 22 offenders, respectively...
March 20, 2024: International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38495910/workplace-trauma-and-professional-quality-of-life-in-clinical-and-forensic-psychiatry-the-critic-study
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anthony F T Bloemendaal, Astrid M Kamperman, Annette E Bonebakker, N Kool, M Olff, C L Mulder
BACKGROUND: Frontline staff in psychiatry need to perform at a very high professional level in order to ensure patient and community safety. At the same time they are exposed to high levels of stress and workplace trauma. This may have severe consequences for their professional quality of life. In addition, health care workers in general have higher incidence levels of childhood adversity than the general population. The CRITIC (CRITical Incidents and aggression in Caregivers) Study aims to improve increased understanding of the interaction between personal life history (childhood adversity and benevolence), individual capabilities, exposure to trauma and violence at work and Professional Quality of Life (ProQOL)...
2024: Frontiers in Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38493732/persons-with-mental-disorders-and-assisted-dying-practices-in-spain-in-response-to-ramos-et-al
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Josep Pifarre, Montse Esquerda, Francesc Torralba, Jacinto Bátiz, Margarita Bofarull
Ramos et al. paper offers a narrative review of Spanish Organic Law 3/2021, which regulates euthanasia, focusing on its application to individuals with mental disorders. Ramos et al. examine the application of legal prerequisites from an ethical-legal perspective to ascertain the conditions under which psychiatric euthanasia might be considered legitimate and compliant with legal stipulations. Nevertheless, it is apparent that the core ethical inquiries linked to this matter have not been exhaustively investigated...
March 16, 2024: International Journal of Law and Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38471328/adult-safeguarding-legislation-navigating-the-borderlands-between-mental-capacity-mental-health-and-social-care-law-and-practice
#30
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Kathryn Mackay, Pearse McCusker
Adult safeguarding legislation is contentious because it seeks to protect 'vulnerable' adults who fall between the borderlands of social care, mental health and mental capacity law. As a new and complex area of law and practice, further research on adult safeguarding legislation is required, in particular to consider it efficacy and human rights implications. Utilising a narrative literature review approach this article explores current research evidence on the Adult Support and Protection (Scotland) Act 2007 to consider whether safeguarding powers and duties can achieve a proportionate balance between individual autonomy and the state's duties to protect adults at risk of harm and, if so, how...
March 11, 2024: International Journal of Law and Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38467442/contributors-to-physician-burnout-and-well-being-in-forensic-psychiatrists-in-canada
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Treena Wilkie, Roland M Jones, Lisa Ramshaw, Graham Glancy, Lindsay Groat, Sumeeta Chatterjee
The experience of burnout in forensic psychiatrists has not been well studied, with most studies focusing on the experiences of forensic nurses, the impact of vicarious trauma and compassion fatigue in forensic mental health professionals, and the risk of posttraumatic stress disorder related to workplace exposures. This study reports on a national survey (34% response rate) conducted with forensic psychiatrists across Canada to understand the rate of, and contributors to, burnout and professional fulfillment...
March 11, 2024: Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38467439/the-forensic-mental-health-implications-of-social-media-challenges
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Emily M Asher, Nathaniel P Morris, Dale E McNiel, Renée L Binder
Children and adults are increasingly spending time on social networking sites where they may be exposed to social media challenges. These challenges, which are essentially dares or competitions, often involve participants recording themselves performing various activities to create a short video which they then share online. Many social media challenges may be considered relatively benign, but others may involve behaviors or tasks that lead to adverse outcomes, including injury and death. In this article, the authors describe different types of social media challenges, susceptibility to risk-taking among social media users, and the potential criminal and civil legal aspects of these challenges...
March 11, 2024: Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38467437/forensic-evaluation-of-refugees-from-myanmar
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Gangaw Zaw, Shoba Sreenivasan, Laljit Sidhu
Forensic evaluators may have little experience and knowledge of the political context of Myanmar, the Burmese people, and the refugee crisis. Oppression of several ethnic minority groups has marked Burmese military rule of Myanmar for several decades. Protracted trauma exposure, both pre- and post-migration, among refugee populations increases the risk for mental health disorders, particularly depression, anxiety, alcohol abuse, and posttraumatic stress disorder. These experiences may result in anger and psychiatric manifestations that bring Burmese refugees in conflict with the law in their host country...
March 11, 2024: Journal of the American Academy of Psychiatry and the Law
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38459744/forensic-psychiatric-issues-in-intellectual-disability
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mark J Hauser, Robert Kohn
Forensic psychiatrists and neuropsychiatrists are likely to encounter individuals with intellectual disability as they are over-represented in the judicial system. These individuals may have the full range of mental illnesses and comorbid conditions, including physical infirmity, sensory deficits, language impairment, and maladaptive behaviors. They are frequently disadvantaged in the judicial system due to lack of comprehension, lack of accommodations, and stigmatization. Decision making capacity may need to be assessed for health care, sexual autonomy, marriage, financial management, making a will, and need for guardianship...
March 8, 2024: Behavioral Sciences & the Law
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38459739/how-online-data-informs-forensic-mental-health-evaluations-of-sexual-behavior-an-overview
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Camille Morgan, Carolina Klein
The Internet plays a pervasive role in modern life including the expression of human sexuality and sexual offending. A range of online sexual activities may be of interest in forensic mental health evaluations (FMHE), including those which are clearly illegal or those which are legal but functionally problematic. Online sexual offenses will clearly prompt forensic evaluators to consider the role of the Internet in these offending behaviors. The Internet may also be relevant in forensic evaluations of contact sexual offending including informing on history of mixed or cross-over offending, and Internet-facilitated contact offenses...
March 8, 2024: Behavioral Sciences & the Law
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38455272/persons-with-mental-disorders-and-suicidality-in-crisis-or-high-risk-situations-involving-police-negotiation-a-systematic-review
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Bobbie Clugston, Carla Meurk, Meredith Harris, Philip Burgess, Ed Heffernan
Police negotiators respond to crisis and high-risk situations including mental health crises, but little is known about the nature, frequency and characteristics of these events. This systematic review examined literature about mental disorder and suicidality prevalence in negotiation events from peer-reviewed articles published within the last 20 years. Of 1455 articles identified, 11 met study inclusion criteria. Most contributed only indirect evidence using data on fatal police encounters, case reviews and analysis of communication techniques...
2024: Psychiatry, Psychology, and Law: An Interdisciplinary Journal of the Australian and New Zealand Association of Psychiatry, Psychology and Law
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38455271/death-by-hunger-strike-suicide-or-not
#37
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Joseph H Obegi
Conventional thinking holds that most inmates who hunger strike do not desire to die. Rather, they want prison officials to concede to their demands. In this paper, I examine whether death by hunger strike can be classified as suicide. After reviewing definitions of suicide and suicidal intent, I conclude that some deaths by hunger strike can be readily classified as suicides. I further propose that conditional intention is a useful way to understand the complex motivations of hunger strikers. I close by discussing the implications of conditional intention for the assessment of suicidal intent among hunger strikers and for the duty of mental health providers to prevent suicide...
2024: Psychiatry, Psychology, and Law: An Interdisciplinary Journal of the Australian and New Zealand Association of Psychiatry, Psychology and Law
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38455267/who-gets-diverted-into-treatment-a-study-of-defendants-with-psychosis
#38
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Christel Macdonald, Don Weatherburn, Tony Butler, Olayan Albalawi, David Greenberg, Michael Farrell
The current study aimed to advance our understanding of the factors that influence mental health diversion in Local Courts in New South Wales, Australia. Logistic regression was used to systematically identify the factors that are correlated with diversion in a cohort of individuals ( N  = 7283) diagnosed with psychosis. Those with a substance-induced psychotic disorder were less likely to be diverted than those with an affective psychosis or schizophrenia, after adjusting for age, gender, Indigenous status, offence seriousness, violence and criminal history...
2024: Psychiatry, Psychology, and Law: An Interdisciplinary Journal of the Australian and New Zealand Association of Psychiatry, Psychology and Law
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38454364/practical-implications-of-icd-11-personality-disorder-classifications
#39
REVIEW
Bing Pan, Wei Wang
Personality disorders (PDs) are associated with an inferior quality of life, poor health, and premature mortality, leading to heavy clinical, familial, and societal burdens. The International Classification of Diseases-11 (ICD-11) makes a thorough, dramatic paradigm shift from the categorical to dimensional diagnosis of PD and expands the application into adolescence. We have reviewed the recent literature on practical implications, and severity and trait measures of ICD-11 defined PDs, by comparing with the alternative model of personality disorders in the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5), by mentioning the relevance in forensic and social concerns, and by referencing the developmental implication of life span, especially in adolescence...
March 7, 2024: BMC Psychiatry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38446565/an-uncontrolled-case-study-of-a-tabletop-role-playing-therapy-group-with-difficult-to-engage-patients
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Autumn Slaughter, Scott Orth
Mental health organizations are increasingly adapting tabletop role-playing games (TTRPGs) into psychotherapy groups. Existing literature on therapeutic modalities with similar methods and theories of change suggest TTRPGs holds great promise in creating positive change for certain mental health populations, particularly those that have not responded well to traditional psychotherapy formats. At this time, no published, peer-reviewed research has examined TTRPG therapy groups offered to adults. Here we describe the application of one 8-week TTRPG therapy group with seven adults at a forensic facility...
April 2023: International Journal of Group Psychotherapy
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