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Rethinking Evidence-Based Practice for Women and Girls
Barbara E. Bloom, Ph.D., M.S.W. Stephanie S. Covington, Ph.D., L.C.S.W. Center for Gender and Justice AJFO Conference Jackson, MS October 11, 2009
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History Martinson – Nothing works What works – Canadian research
Evidence-based practice vs. gender- responsive approaches © S. Covington, 2009
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Evidence-Based Principles for Effective Interventions
Assess actuarial risk/needs Enhance intrinsic motivation Target interventions (risk, need, responsivity, dosage, treatment) Skill train with directed practice (cognitive behavioral treatment methods) Increase positive reinforcement Engage ongoing support in communities Measure relevant processes/practices Provide measurement feedback © S. Covington, 2009
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Evidence-Based Practice in Criminal Justice Settings
Assessment tools address: Risk - Predict likelihood of reoffending Need - Treatment and services target “criminogenic” needs Responsivity - Matching services to the learning styles and abilities of offenders © S. Covington, 2009
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Current Concerns Risk/need assessments
Cognitive-behavioral programming © S. Covington, 2009
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Risk/needs Assessment
Risk assessments assume that risk can be predicted Focus is on offender deficits rather than strengths “The gender problem” – Risk/needs assessment advocates assert that men and women share similar risk and need factors Feminist literature – Growing body of research that critiques the sameness argument © S. Covington, 2009
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“The Big Four” Criminal history Criminal associates
Criminal personality Criminal thinking © S. Covington, 2009
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Risk Holtfreter, Reisig & Morash (2004) found that poverty status was a more powerful predictor of recidivism among women offenders than the combined summary risk index of the LSI-R. The authors suggested that the LSI-R fails to take into account the economic marginality of women offenders. © S. Covington, 2009
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Risk and Needs Assessment Instruments
Level of Service Inventory Revised (LSI-R) Correctional Offender Management Profiling for Alternative Sanctions (COMPAS) © S. Covington, 2009
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Cognitive-Behavioral Programming
Guided by Social Learning Theory Assumes that one size fits all Ignores “gendered pathways” © S. Covington, 2009
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Current Concerns (cont.)
Trauma Lack of therapeutic environment Mental health Lack of services DSM not evidence-based © S. Covington, 2009
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Creating the Bridge National Institute of Corrections – Integration of EBP and Gender Responsive Principles Pat Van Voorhis – Development of a gender- responsive trailer Canadian Research – Kelley Blanchette Development of a gender-informed risk/needs assessment tool © S. Covington, 2009
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Gender-Informed Risk Assessment
Blanchette and Taylor question the value and appropriateness of moving forward with gender-neutral risk assessment instruments. They argue for a “gender-informed” assessment approach including a tool developed “from the ground up.” © S. Covington, 2009
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A Shift from What Works to What is the Work?
Prevention Do no harm Gender-responsive services Reentry to community © S. Covington, 2009
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Definition: Gender-Responsiveness
Creating an environment through site selection, staff selection, program development, content, and material that reflects an understanding of the realities of the lives of women and girls and that addresses and responds to their strengths and challenges. (Covington and Bloom) © S. Covington, 2009
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Definition of Gender-specific Services/Approaches
…are those that intentionally allow research and knowledge on female socialization and development and girls’ risks, strengths and needs to affect and guide ALL aspects of program and system design, processes, and services… (DCF/CSSD Guidelines 2008) Connecticut © S. Covington, 2009
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Guiding Principles for Gender-Responsive Services
Environment Relationships Integrated Services Economic & Social Status Community © S. Covington, 2009
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Guiding Principles Gender: Acknowledge that gender makes a difference.
Environment: Create an environment based on safety, respect, and dignity. © S. Covington, 2009
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Guiding Principles (cont.)
Relationships: Develop policies, practices, and programs that are relational and promote healthy connections to children, family, significant others, and the community. Services: Address substance abuse, trauma, and mental health issues through comprehensive, integrated, and culturally relevant services. © S. Covington, 2009
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Guiding Principles (cont.)
Socioeconomic status: Provide women with opportunities to improve their socioeconomic conditions. Community: Establish a system of comprehensive and collaborative community services. (Bloom, Owen, Covington 2003) © S. Covington, 2009
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Women’s Integrated Treatment ( WIT ) This model is holistic, integrated and based on:
The gender-responsive definition and guiding principles A theoretical foundation Interventions/strategies that are multi- dimensional (Covington, 2007) © S. Covington, 2009
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Four Theories Pathways Trauma Addiction Psychological Development
© S. Covington, 2009
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Pathways Perspective Women’s crimes embedded in the
conditions of their lives Examines the specific life course events that place women at risk for offending Triple jeopardy: The impact of race, class & gender (Bloom) Multiple marginality: From families, school, work (Owen) Trauma & addiction (Covington) © S. Covington, 2009
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Definition of Evidence-based
Evidence-based practice (EBP) is defined as the integration of the best available research and clinical expertise within the context of patient characteristics, culture, values, and preferences. (APA Presidential Task Force, 2005) © S. Covington, 2009
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Whose Evidence is It? Most research is conducted by the founders of the approach. Up to 40% of the results are due to “allegiance effects.” (Duncan & Miller, 2006) © S. Covington, 2009
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What Kind of Evidence? Thousands of studies have found no difference among therapeutic approaches A few studies have found favorable results (example: CBT 15 vs. 2985) (Duncan & Miller, 2006) © S. Covington, 2009
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A Lot to Lose: What it Takes
Emphasis on relationship and trust Working in partnership with participants Flexibility with quality standards Importance of environment Accountability (by staff and program) (Smyth and Schorr, 2009) © S. Covington, 2009
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What’s at Stake? Risk of continuing to distort social policy priorities Risk not being able to make reliable judgments about the effectiveness of programs due to lack of experimental design Risk spending huge sums of money to gather information that arrives too late to inform decision-making © S. Covington, 2009
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What is Needed? A reexamination of what constitutes evidence
How evidence varies by circumstances More attention and resources invested in practice-based evidence © S. Covington, 2009
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What the Research Says 87% of change is client factors
13% of change is therapeutic factors (Wampold, 2000) © S. Covington, 2009
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Behavioral Health (examples of missing information)
Gender Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM) What the research says Client Therapeutic alliance Impact of environment © S. Covington, 2009
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A Culture Shift: The Core Values of Trauma-Informed Services
Fallot/Community Connections/2008 A Culture Shift: The Core Values of Trauma-Informed Services Safety: Ensuring physical and emotional safety Trustworthiness: Maximizing trustworthiness, making tasks clear, and maintaining appropriate boundaries Choice: Prioritizing woman’s choice and control Collaboration: Maximizing collaboration and sharing of power with woman Empowerment: Prioritizing empowerment and skill-building © S. Covington, 2009 32
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Gender-Responsive Program Assessment Tool
Program Elements Theoretical Foundation & Mission Statement Site and Facility Administration and Staffing Program Environment/Culture Treatment Planning Program Development Program Assessment © S. Covington, 2009
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Interactive Exercise Safety © S. Covington, 2009
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Concluding Themes Gender matters
Integration of gender-informed theories will increase the efficacy of services for women and girls. Consideration of women’s (and girls) pathways into the criminal justice system is critical to assessment and case management. Women’s (and girls) strengths should be incorporated into any model of rehabilitation. Multi-disciplinary approaches will yield the greatest results for women and girls. © S. Covington, 2009
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Emerging Paradigm Values-based Services
Gender-responsive Trauma-informed Culturally competent Recovery-oriented (SAMHSA 2009) © S. Covington, 2009
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Stephanie S. Covington, Ph.D.
For more information: Barbara E. Bloom, Ph.D. (707) Stephanie S. Covington, Ph.D. (858) ` © S. Covington, 2009
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