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Original Articles

Is treatment non-completion associated with increased reconviction over no treatment?

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Pages 333-343 | Received 05 Jun 2006, Published online: 09 Jul 2007
 

Abstract

There is accruing evidence that offenders who do not complete treatment are at greater risk of recidivism than those who do complete treatment. Profiles of non-completers show them to be high risk of reoffending compared with completers, and differences in reconviction may be explained by these baseline levels. What is unclear is whether non-completion actually increases the risk of reoffending over no treatment at all. The purpose of this review was to examine the recidivism of non-completers compared with untreated offenders of comparable risk. A systematic search of the literature relating to cognitive–behavioural interventions revealed 16 relevant studies describing 17 samples. The mean effect size (d=−0.16) of differences in reoffending between untreated offenders and treatment non-completers suggests that failing to complete treatment is associated with elevated levels of reoffending, with this effect being more pronounced in community samples (d=−0.23) than institutional samples (d=−0.15). Methodological limitations include poor risk comparability between samples and heterogeneity of non-completers, nevertheless it is possible that treatment non-completion may make some offenders more likely to reoffend.

Acknowledgements

This paper is based upon a report prepared for HM Prison Service's Offending Behaviour Programmes Unit.

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