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Evaluation and applications of the Clinically Significant Change method with the Violence Risk Scale-Sexual Offender version : Implications for risk-change communication Mark E. Olver, Sarah M. Beggs Christofferson and Stephen C.P. Wong

By: Olver, Mark E.
Contributor(s): Beggs Christofferson, Sarah | Wong, Stephen C.P.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Behavioral Sciences and the Law.Publisher: Wiley Online Library, 2015Subject(s): CANADA | SEXUAL VIOLENCE | Kia Marama Special Treatment Unit | BEHAVIOUR CHANGE | RECIDIVISM | RISK ASSESSMENT | SEX OFFENDERS | NEW ZEALANDOnline resources: Read the abstract In: Behavioral Sciences & the Law, 2015, 33: 92-110Summary: The authors examined the use of the clinically significant change (CSC) method with the Violence Risk Scale-Sexual Offender version (VRS-SO), and its implications for risk communication, in a combined sample of 945 treated sexual offenders from three international settings, followed up for a minimum 5 years post-release. This paper is based on research in Canada and New Zealand (Kia Marama Special Treatment Unit). Record #4619
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Behavioral Sciences & the Law, 2015, 33: 92-110

The authors examined the use of the clinically significant change (CSC) method with the Violence
Risk Scale-Sexual Offender version (VRS-SO), and its implications for risk communication, in a combined sample of 945 treated sexual offenders from three international settings, followed up for a minimum 5 years post-release. This paper is based on research in Canada and New Zealand (Kia Marama Special Treatment Unit). Record #4619