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Intensive Supervision Program (ISP) Multisystemic Therapy in WA Juvenile Justice

Intensive Supervision Program (ISP) Multisystemic Therapy in WA Juvenile Justice. Causal Models of Delinquency & Drug Use. Prior Delinquent Behavior. Family. -. +. Low Parental Monitoring Low Affection High Conflict. Delinquent Peers. Delinquent Behavior. +. School. -.

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Intensive Supervision Program (ISP) Multisystemic Therapy in WA Juvenile Justice

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  1. Intensive Supervision Program (ISP)Multisystemic Therapy in WA Juvenile Justice

  2. Causal Models of Delinquency & Drug Use Prior Delinquent Behavior Family - + Low Parental Monitoring Low Affection High Conflict Delinquent Peers Delinquent Behavior + School - Low School Involvement Poor Academic Performance Elliott, Huizinga & Ageton (1985) Condensed Longitudinal Model

  3. What is ISP? • One of a number of new DoJ initiatives to reduce juvenile offending • Intensive, community based approach to target known causes of juvenile offending • Branch of JCS, based in community alongside CJS – Mirrabooka, Cannington, Midland • Each team consists of Supervisor, 3 Clinicians, Aboriginal Team Advisor. • The ATA role is unique to MST but vital to the Australian model • Based on Multisystemic Therapy (MST), data supports it as best treatment model for serious, repeat young offenders - Licensed by MST Services

  4. About ISP: Target Group Young people aged 10–17 who are engaged in JJ and meet all/some of the following: • Are at risk of placement in detention/remand due to delinquent behaviour • Are returning to the community following placement in detention/remand • Are placed on high end orders • Have a history of chronic or violent offences • Exhibit seriously disturbed anti social behaviours • Known to engage in substance misuse

  5. About ISP: Exclusionary Criteria • No identified primary caregiver • Young people in suicidal, psychotic or homicidal states • Young people who engage exclusively in serious sexual offences • Behaviour is more directly attributable to organic factors rather than environmental factors

  6. Issues faced by ISP Clients • Sub-standard housing, no electricity or heating, lack of food, overcrowding, vandalism. • Lack of positive male role models, drug use/selling, high debts, direct or vicarious violence. • No phone or car in case of emergency. • Removed from home community • Young person and parents not in education or working. • Intergenerational involvement with justice system

  7. About MST The program treats known causes of juvenile offending behaviour: The program uses the strengths in all these systems to facilitate change

  8. Families As The Solution • MST focuses on families as the solution. • Families are full collaborators in treatment planning and delivery with a focus on family members as the long-term change agents. • Giving up on families, or labeling them as “resistant” or “unmotivated” is not an option. • MST has a strong track record of client engagement, retention, and satisfaction.

  9. About MST: Aims • Reduce offending and anti social behaviour • Improve caregiver discipline practices • Enhance family relationships • Emphasis on parental empowerment • Decrease youth association with deviant peers • Increase youth association with pro social peers • Improve youth school or vocational performance • Develop a support network to help caregivers achieve and maintain changes • Reduce substance misuse • Target practical/welfare needs when presenting as barriersto intervention

  10. Researched MST Outcomes • 25 –70% lowering in recidivism in serious and violent young offenders at 1,2 and 4 year follow up • Fewer arrests, fewer offences, and less detention • Decreased behavioural problems at home and school • Improved family relations and functioning • Increased mainstream school attendance • Excellent cross cultural validity • Cost reductions: Custody is significantly more expensive per child than the MST program.

  11. Research • Henggeler, Rodick, Borduin, Hanson, Watson & Urey (1986). Multisystemic treatment of juvenile offenders: Effects on adolescent behaviour and family interactions. Developmental Psychology, 22, 132-141. Results • Conducted from 1978-1983 – MST versus usual community services; MST more effective in decreasing adolescent behavioural problems and improving family relations

  12. Research • Brunk Henggeler & Whelan (1987). A comparison of MST & parent training in brief treatment of child abuse & neglect. J of Consulting & Clinical Psych, 55, 311-318. Results • Randomly allocated families to home-based MST Vs parent training; parents reported decreased psychiatiric symptomatology, reduced overall stress & a reduction in the severity of identified problems; observational measures favoured MST condition – parents controlled their children’s behaviour more effectively, less passive noncompliance, parents more responsive

  13. Research • Borduin, Henggler, Blaske & Stein (1990). Multisystemic treatment of adolescent sexual offenders. International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, 35, 105 – 114. Results • Randomly assigned to MST Vs office-based, individual, outpatient counseling (200 chronic juvenile offenders); self-report, other-report, family assessment sessions, recidivism at 4 yr follow up

  14. Research Continued • Significantly fewer participants re-arrested for sexual crimes (1/8 Vs 6/8) • Mean frequency of rearrest for nonsexual crimes also lower - MST (0.62) outpatient counseling (2.25) • Family members who received MST reported increased family cohesion & adaptability • Observations indicated increased supportiveness & decreased conflict-hostility • Parents in MST showed greater reductions in psychiatric symptomatology

  15. About MST: In Practice • Low caseloads, 3-6 families per clinician, allows intensive service to be delivered (2-15 hrs each family per week) • Treatment occurs daily to several times a week, with sessions decreasing as treatment progresses • Treatment time limited, lasts 4-6 months, depends on seriousness of problems & success of interventions • Treatment delivered in families natural environment, including SCHOOL and other community places

  16. About MST: InPractice • Works with linked family issues (marital counselling, child management strategies) • Clinicians are accountable for intervention activities • Clinicians available 24-hours a day, 7 days – flexible family friendly schedule • Involves all relevant stakeholders • Adheres to principles & analytic process • Uses CBT, Behaviour Therapy, pragmatic family therapy • Quality assurance processes

  17. About MST: Principles • Primary purpose of assessment is to understand the fit between identified problems and their broader systemic context • Therapeutic contacts emphasise the positive and use systemic strengths as levers for change • Interventions are designed to promote responsible behaviour • Interventions are present focused and action oriented, targeting specific and well-defined problems

  18. About MST: Principles 5. Target sequences of behaviour 6. Interventions are developmentally appropriate 7. Interventions are designed to require daily or weekly effort by family members 8. Continuous evaluation from multiple perspectives 9. Promote treatment generalisation & long-term maintenance of therapeutic change by empowering caregivers

  19. About MST: Supervision & Quality Assurance • Principles • Do Loop guides analysis to keep intervention systematic • Weekly team supervision • Weekly Supervisor consult with MST Services • Weekly Team consult with MST Services • Paperwork • Client feedback (TAMS) • Supervision feedback (SAMS) • ATA feedback

  20. MST: The Do-Loop Referral Behaviour DesiredOutcomes OfFamilyandOther KeyParticipants Overarching Goals MSTConceptualization Of“Fit” Intermediary Goals Assessmentof Advances& Barriersto InterventionEffectiveness Intervention Development Intervention Implementation

  21. Examples of Referral Behaviours Primary reasons for referral to the ISP. • Offending Behaviour–aggravated burglary x 15; also facing charges for fire lighting and assaulting a public officer • Truancy–mum reported that since son moved to father’s residence, he had been truanting and hadn’t attended school fro five weeks. • Misbehaviour at School–The school reported that son often misbehaved in class, e.g., rude & aggressive toward teachers, refused to work, climbed out of windows & put no effort into his work. • Aggressive Behaviours–mum stated that son was regularly physically & emotionally aggressive toward her & brother, e.g., yelling, swearing, pushing, hitting, bullying, throwing objects, name calling & intimidating. • Substance Misuse–son has admitted sniffing substances in the past. Also alcohol and cannabis daily. Occasional speed use.

  22. Examples of Concurrent Interventions • Reducing aggression at home by increasing level and consistency of consequences by both parents • Reducing substance misuse by increasing parental monitoring, reducing parental drug use and increasing engagement in pro-social activities • Reducing offending by increasing contact with pro-social peer network.

  23. Examples of Overarching Goals Are specific, include key indicators of achievement & are operationalised. 1.Reduce Aggressive Behaviours - son will reduce his aggressive behaviours (physical, verbal, intimidation) as evidenced by: • NO incidents of violence including NO yelling, swearing, hitting (with/without objects), pushing, threatening others, bullying, name calling, put downs, throwing things. • NO new offences (in particular NO violence toward mum, brother, dad). • Complying with parents’ requests without becoming aggressive. • Not blaming others for his behaviour – accepting responsibility for it.

  24. Examples of Overarching Goals 2. Improve Behaviour & Performance at School: son will improve his behaviour & performance at school as evidenced by: • Attending school 5x per week unless sick • NO truanting • NO disruptive behaviour including NO: talking out of turn, calling out to others, rushing work & putting in no effort, being rude/aggressive to students (swearing, bullying) or teachers (backchatting), refusing to do work, getting detentions, climbing out of classrooms, or always getting out of his seat.

  25. Example of Conceptualisation of Fit Examines the fit of the behaviour in the environment & looks at what “drives” the behaviour at various systems levels: • Individual • Family • Peer • School • Community - eliciting evidence for each. Problem behaviours are obtained from the overarching goals Example- son’s truanting behaviours

  26. Example of Fit Circle Parents unaware of the extent of Dean’s truanting due to low communication with the school (family) Dean able to access privileges at home when truanting (family) Dean’s Truancy Dean dislikes attending certain classes as they are too difficult for him (individual) No serious consequences given at home (family) Dean doesn’t like catching the bus (individual) Friends were frequently truanting & displaying antisocial behaviours (peers)

  27. Example of Intermediary Goals Intermediary goals are developed from the prioritised drivers. Prioritised Drivers: 1. No serious consequences are given at home(family) 2. Parents unaware of the extent of son’s truanting due to low communication with the school (family) 3. son dislikes attending certain classes as they are too difficult for him (school). Related Intermediary Goals: • Develop a behaviour management plan with dad and mum related to truancy (increasing parental alignment). • dad and mum to increase their communication with the school by making an appointment to meet with the teachers. • dad/mum to organise meeting with Deputy & son to look at changing his subjects/using a teacher’s aide.

  28. Example of Developing Intervention Involve family, specific (who/ what/when/where) & use MST principles. Driver: No serious consequences given at home. IG: Develop Behaviour Management Plan (BMP). • parents to compile list of behaviours they’d like son to adhere to in/out of the home. • Son to complete Reward List to determine which rewards/activities are most desirable/undesirable to him (to inform BMP). • parents write rules for the BMP based on behaviours they’d like to see/not see using rewards/consequences from the list. • Parents practice/Role play introducing BMP to son, preparing parents for likely negative reaction from him. Principles – Action oriented, present focused, responsible behaviour, generalisation, daily effort.

  29. Example of Intervention Evaluation Some Advances: • parents met with the Deputy principal and son’s 2 teachers. • School was able to change son’s optional classes to those he liked, and tailored the work to suit his level • mum phones school daily to check son’s attendance • parents began rewarding Dean for attending school. • son’s truancy decreased (during first week, only missed 3 classes).

  30. Age Prior Education Family Function Drug Use Prior to Treatment Parental Forensic History Prior Accommodation Psych Parent/child Conflict Parental Monitoring Number of Offences Court Appearance Past legal involvement (eg orders, bond) Success in Achieving Overarching Goals Treatment Strategies ISP Hours Contact/Times contacted Offending During Treatment Offend Post 3 Month Drug Use Post Treatment Employ/training Improved Parenting/monitor Research Directions: Evaluation Variables of Evaluating ISP

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