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working with MEN with DEVIANT SEXUAL INTERESTS

working with MEN with DEVIANT SEXUAL INTERESTS. Dr Rajan Darjee Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist. Models of human sexuality. Sexual strategy theory Evolutionary psychology Sexual scripting theory Cultural, interpersonal, intrapsychic The big picture

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working with MEN with DEVIANT SEXUAL INTERESTS

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  1. working with MEN with DEVIANT SEXUAL INTERESTS Dr Rajan Darjee Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist

  2. Models of human sexuality • Sexual strategy theory • Evolutionary psychology • Sexual scripting theory • Cultural, interpersonal, intrapsychic • The big picture • Neurobiological, developmental, psychological, social, cultural, population factors • Dual control model • Balance between excitatory and inhibitory neurobiological systems

  3. The Dual Control model (Bancroft & Janssen 2000) Whether sexual response and arousal occurs in a particular individual, in a particular situation, is ultimately determined by the balance of two systems in an individual’s brain, the sexual activation or excitation system and the sexual inhibition system, each of which has a neurobiological substrate

  4. The Dual Control model (Bancroft & Janssen 2000) Three basic assumptions: • The effects of any stimulation depends ultimately on neurobiological characteristics. • Neurobiological inhibitionof sexual response is an adaptive pattern, preventing distracting effects of sexual arousal and appetite when sexual activity would be disadvantageous or dangerous. • Individuals varyin their propensity for both sexual excitation and sexual inhibition.

  5. The Psychosomatic Circle of Sex (Bancroft 2009)

  6. Human sexuality • Sexual development • Sexual differentiation (anatomical) • Gender identity • Sexual interests, arousal, preference • Sexual relationships • Sexual identity

  7. Types of sexual problems • Problems of reduced interest or response • Problems with gender or sexual identity • Problematic sexual behaviour

  8. Sexual interests etc. - TERMINOLOGY • Sexual attraction • Sexual desire • Sexual interest • Sexual arousal • Sexual behaviour • Sexual fantasy • Sexual preference • Sexual urge

  9. Sexual fantasy • Is use of sexual fantasy different between offenders and non-offenders? • Role of sexual fantasy: • Enhancement of positive mood state • Coping with negative mood state • Enhance sexual arousal • Escape from reality • Rehearsing sexual behaviour • Fantasy shapes and is shaped by behaviour and experience • Range of arousing fantasies / stimuli

  10. Sexual interests • Development: childhood, adolescence, adulthood • Range of sexual interests • No interest vs. some interest vs. strong interest vs. preference • State vs. trait • Dimensional vs. categorical

  11. Adolescence • In males there appears to be a critical period of sexual development around puberty, when sexual arousal to certain stimuli becomes an established pattern • This is determined neurobiologically • But maintenance depends on subsequent psycho-sexual experience/development, abnormal learning

  12. Neurobiology of sexual orientation • Prenatal androgen exposure • Fraternal birth order: mother producing antibodies to male-specific antigens in male foetuses • Non-right handedness • Structural findings: • Interstitial nucleus of the hypothalamus and suprachiasmatic nucleus • Hemispheric volume symmetry • Anterior commisure • Functional findings • Effects of pheromones • Functional cerebral asymmetry • Response to visual sexual stimuli

  13. Neurobiological studies of sex offenders • Neuro-imaging • Temporal lobe abnormalities • ? Frontal • ? Amygdala / other subcortical areas • Functional imaging studies emerging • Neuropsychology • Executive function • Intelligence, memory, handedness • Emotional intelligence • Brain injury and sexually inappropriate behaviour • Genetics • Klinefelter’s syndrome • Endocrine • Testosterone • Neurotransmitters • 5-HT

  14. Structural imaging studies in paedophilia Becerra-García, JA (2011) Magnetic Resonance Techniques in Study of Sexual Stimuli Processing in Paedophilia. In Neuroimaging for Clinicians (Ed. Peres JFP) InTech

  15. Functional imaging studies in paedophilia Becerra-García, JA (2011) Magnetic Resonance Techniques in Study of Sexual Stimuli Processing in Paedophilia. In Neuroimaging for Clinicians (Ed. Peres JFP) InTech

  16. Sexual interests interact with other factors • Role of other factors in development and maintenance of deviant interests • Role of other factors in precipitating experiencing deviant interests • Role of other factors in precipitating acting on deviant interests

  17. Paraphilia DSM-IV TR CRITERION A • Recurrent, intense sexually arousing fantasies, sexual urges or behaviors • Generally involving • Nonhuman objects, or • Suffering/humiliation of oneself or one’s partner, or • Children or other nonconsenting persons • Occurring over a period of 6 months CRITERION B • Cause clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning

  18. Paraphilias DSM-5PARAPHILIA (A) vs PARAPHILIA DISORDER (A & B) • A. Over a period of at least 6 months, recurrent and intense sexual arousal from_________ as manifested by fantasies, urges or behaviors. • B. The person has clinically significant distress or impairment in important areas of functioning or has sought sexual stimulation from ___ or more unsuspecting strangers on separate occasions. • C. Exclusionary criteria (when applicable) • Specifiers – Eg. course and remission – Eg. non-exclusive behavioral manifestations

  19. Types of paraphilia DSM IV TR DSM 5 • Exhibitionism • Fetishism • Frotteurism • Pedophilia • Sexual masochism • Sexual sadism • Transvestic fetishism • Voyeurism • Paraphilia not otherwise specified (e.g. necrophilia, zoophilia) Changes: • Pedohebephilic disorder • Paraphilic coercive disorder • Hypersexual disorder (nonparaphilic but associated disorder)

  20. Kafka, M.P. (2008) Neurobiological processes and comorbidity in sexual deviance. In ‘Sexual Deviance – theory, assessment, and treatment’ (Eds. Laws, D.r. & O’Donohue, W. T.). Guildford Press, New York.

  21. Rates of paraphilias in sexual offenders

  22. Deviant sexual interests as a risk factor for sexual recidivism • Important risk factor for sexual recidivism (many studies and several meta-analyses) • Particularly sexual interest in children (PPG, SSPI) • ?Interest in sexual violence • ?Sexual sadism • ?Other paraphilias

  23. Deviant sexual interests in risk assessment instruments • Overtly present in: • SA07 • SARN • RSVP • SVR-20 • SORAG • By proxy in: • RM 2000 • Static 99

  24. Risk and protective factors for sexual recidivism RISK FACTORS • Historic/static • Stable dynamic/dispositional • Acute/precipitating PROTECTIVE • Internal • External

  25. ASSESSMENT • History from the individual • Reports from other people • Observation of behaviour • Use of sexually stimulating materials/media • Self-report questionnaires • ‘Objective’ measures

  26. ‘Objective’ measures • Penile plethysmography (PPG) • Viewing time measures • Choice reaction time • Implicit association tests • Rapid serial presentation test • Stroop tests • Startle probe refelex • Objective behavioural scales

  27. Objective behavioural scales • Sexual Sadism Scale (SESAS; Nitschket et al. 2012) • Screenig Scale for Pedophilic Interests (Seeto

  28. Sexual sadism scale (SESAS) • Sexually aroused during offence • Exercises power/control/domination • Torture/cruelty • Humiliating/degrading • Sexual mutilation 6. Non-sexual mutilation 7. Gratuitous violence 8. Inserts objects 9. Ritualistic acts 10. Abducts or confines 11. Keeps trophies

  29. Sexual sadism scale (SESAS) contd. PART 2 • Pre-plans offence • Cruelty/torture of other persons or animals • Evidence of sexual arousal by sadistic acts/fantasies SUMMARY EVALUATION Empirical assessment Part 1 score 4-11 = probably sexual sadism Summary assessment Part 1 & 2 and any other material: Sexual sadist Y or N

  30. Screening Scale for Pedophilic Interests (SSPI) • Boy victim (2) • Unrelated child victim (1) • More than one child victim (1) • Victim under 11 years old (1) • Only count victims if aged 13 or younger • Score of 4 or 5 indicates likely

  31. Polygraph: facilitating honesty? • Evidence that voluntary and mandatory post-conviction polygraph testing facilitate disclosure of sexual interests and treatment • Mandatory testing has been introduced and evaluated in England and Wales • Recent case studies from Broadmoor Hospital

  32. Formulation Staticfactors Stable dynamic factors Acute dynamic factors Triggers OFFENCE

  33. Paedophilia • Many child sexual offenders do not have a persistent sexual preference for children • Internet offenders> extra-familial contact offenders > intra-familial offenders • Most men who offend against older teenage girls are no paedophilic • Some paedophiles are only aroused by pre-pubescent children, but most are not • Up to 10-20% of males show some sexual interest in children

  34. Sexual interest in children in ‘normal young men’ (Briere and Runtz 1989)

  35. Sexual sadism • Problems with definition and assessment • ‘Sadomasochism’ vs. ‘criminal sexual sadism’ • Very few rapists are sexually sadistic (<5%) • A significant number of sexual murderers (about 30-40%) are sexually sadistic • Most repeat sexual murderers are sexually sadistic (90%) • Sexual sadism + serious contact offending = extreme caution required • In some countries long-acting anti-libidinals by injection are seen as a necessary treatment

  36. Internet offenders • Men who use child pornography have high rates of paedophilia (higher than other child sex offenders) • Is this a group who despite deviant interests are less likely to commit contact offences? • Extreme pornography – new legislation regarding images/videos depicting bestiality, sadism and/or necrophilia

  37. Working with men with deviant sexual interests – General points • Interviews and your reaction • Only problem if functionally related to offending • Addressing other factors and facilitating health sexual relationships and functioning will deal with it in many/most cases • How to choose intervention approaches • Range and course of deviant interests • Motivation • Formulation • What does he want to achieve • Timing

  38. Principles of intervention (Federoff 2009) • Identify for whom you are working • Facilitate disclosure • Establish what the problem is • Why is the person seeking help now • Avoid one-sided treatment plans • Intervene quickly • Be persistent • Series of ‘experiments’ • Be inclusive and collaborative • Be optimistic

  39. Medication and healthy sexual functioningSildenafil (Viagra)

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