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  2. Aug 18, 2022 · Criminogenic needs can be mitigated with evidence-based practices (EBP) designed to provide resources, strengthen coping mechanisms, keep families together, offer employment assistance, and work through trauma.

    • Risk-To-Reoffend Screens
    • Assessments For Persons Who Score Medium to High on A Risk/Needs screen
    • Specialized Screens and Assessments
    • Behavioral Health Screens and Assessments
    • Medical Screens
    • Activities of Daily Living screen
    • Suicide Risk Screens
    • Alcohol Or Drug Withdrawal Screens
    • Substance Abuse Screens
    • Treatment Screens

    The following table highlights three risk-to-reoffend screens for this purpose. Our intent is not to endorse any individual screen, but instead to draw your attention to screens commonly used in correctional settings that are well regarded by experts in the field. The Proxy Risk Triage Screener is the shortest of the three, with only three items. T...

    Comprehensive criminogenic risk/need assessment instruments are targeted to those who scored medium to high on the quick screen, indicating that they may need more intensive intervention. Multipurpose risk/needs assessments are advantageous because they not only evaluate the risk of recidivism, but identify categories of needs in areas identified a...

    Specialized screens and assessments, in conjunction with comprehensive general risk and needs assessments, can be used to contribute to targeted treatment and transitional planning. Selective use of one or more of these tools is recommended when an individual scores high on all or a section of a comprehensive risk/needs assessment. The tables below...

    Here we briefly discuss some other screens and assessments used in the jails and the community throughout the country.

    1. The Texas Uniform Health Status Updateis a medical screen that is easy to use and comes with user-friendly instructions. Some benefits of this screen are its one-page length and instructions to guide the screener on its use. 2. The New York City Correctional Health Servicesscreen is a four-page screening instrument that uses prompting questions ...

    Dr. Brie Williams, a geriatrician and correctional health care expert, recommends that inmates who miss two or more of the following activities of daily living (ADL) answers be transferred directly to a nursing home or assisted living facility if family cannot care for them. Inmates who miss one ADL and/or have fallen in the past year should be ass...

    1. The Texas Commission on Jail Standards' Mental Disability/Suicide Intake Screenis one page and determines if a further mental health evaluation is needed. Any positive response to the six suicide-related questions requires further evaluation of the person. 2.The Suicide Prevention Screening Guidelines, a 16-item screen developed by the New York ...

    1. The Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment for Alcohol (CIWA-AR)is a recommended alcohol withdrawal screen that can also be used for the psychoactive drug benzodiazepine. This screen requires five minutes to administer and may be reproduced freely. 2. Clinical Opiate Withdrawal Scale (COWS)is an opiate-withdrawal screen.

    1. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services – Simple Screening Instrument for Substance Abuse(pages 7 - 15).

    1. CJ Comprehensive Intake (TCU CJ CI)is usually administered by a counselor in a face-to-face interview held one to three weeks after admission, when the offender has had time to detox and reach greater stabilization and cognitive focus (90 minutes). 2. CJ Client Evaluation of Self and Treatment, Intake Version (TCU CJ CEST-Intake) is a self-ratin...

  3. Jan 13, 2017 · Risk and needs assessments use an actuarial evaluation to guide decision making at various points across the criminal justice continuum by approximating a person’s likelihood of reoffending and determining what individual criminogenic needs must be addressed to reduce that likelihood.

  4. Evidence-based practice (EBP) is a process in which the practitioner combines well-researched interventions with clinical experience and ethics, and client preferences and culture to guide and inform the delivery of treatments and services.

  5. The RNR model holds that interventions with criminal offenders should adhere to three principles: (1) Risk Principle: A focus on individuals who are at a comparatively higher risk for re-offense; (2) Need Principle: The assessment and treatment of the specific “criminogenicneeds that are directly fueling criminal behavior; and (3) Responsivity...

  6. Need principle: Assess criminogenic needs and target them in treatment. Responsivity principle: Maximize the offender's ability to learn from a rehabilitative intervention by providing cognitive behavioural treatment and tailoring the intervention to the learning style, motivation, abilities and strengths of the offender.

  7. The IOM assessment model investigates potential criminogenic needs using a combination of an offence-focused behavioural interview and an established criminogenic needs inventory – the Level of Service Inventory Revised (LSI-R: Andrews and Bonta, 1993).

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