Prevention of Sexual Child Abuse: Preliminary Results From an Outpatient Therapy Program

2020 | journal article; research paper. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Prevention of Sexual Child Abuse: Preliminary Results From an Outpatient Therapy Program​
Wild, T. S. N. ; Müller, I.; Fromberger, P. ; Jordan, K. ; Klein, L. & Müller, J. L. ​ (2020) 
Frontiers in Psychiatry11 pp. 88​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00088 

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Authors
Wild, Tamara S. N. ; Müller, Isabel; Fromberger, Peter ; Jordan, Kirsten ; Klein, Lenka; Müller, Jürgen L. 
Abstract
In Germany, access to outpatient treatment services devoted to the prevention of (further) sexual offenses against minors and child sexual exploitation material (CSEM) offenses is often limited. The therapy project "Prevention of Sexual Abuse" tries to fill this gap by providing treatment to patients with a self-reported sexual interest in children and adolescents, irrespective of whether or not they are pedophilic or prosecuted by the legal justice system. Within the project, a treatment manual was developed which specifically addresses dynamic risk-factors in child sexual abusers and CSEM offenders. The treatment manual was conceived to reduce recidivism risk and to contribute to the enhancement of the patients' personal well-being. In this paper, results of the accompanying scientific research are presented: offense-supportive attitudes (N = 23), self-reported CSEM use (N = 10), emotional distress (N = 24), and participants' subjective risk perception of committing (further) sexual offenses (N = 25) reduced during the course of treatment. A reduction of offense-supportive attitudes was further observed from pre-intervention to 1-year follow-up (N = 8). Changes with regard to self-efficacy, quality of life, participants' self-perceived ability to control sexual impulses toward children and adolescents permanently, and several measures assessing different kinds of sexual recidivism did not, however, reach any level of significance. During an average observation period of 2.4 years, six patients confessed to have conducted new sexual exploitation material offenses, while no further sexual abuse cases were reported (N = 19). Due to the used research design and small sample sizes, treatment effects cannot be inferred and external validity is limited. This notwithstanding, results provide first evidence for a relationship between treatment participation and self-reported recidivism and psychological well-being.
Issue Date
2020
Journal
Frontiers in Psychiatry 
Organization
Klinik für Psychiatrie und Psychotherapie 
ISSN
1664-0640
eISSN
1664-0640
Language
English
Sponsor
Open-Access-Publikationsfonds 2020

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