ZeePedia

PSYCHOTHERAPY IN FORENSIC SETTINGS AND SPECIAL CHALLENGES

<< PSYCHOTHERAPIES IN FORENSIC SETTINGS:Avoiding reactance, Externalization
FORENSIC PSYCHOTHERAPY:Exploring therapeutic alliance, Music Therapy >>
img
Forensic Psychology (PSY - 513)
VU
Lesson 35
PSYCHOTHERAPY IN FORENSIC SETTINGS AND SPECIAL CHALLENGES
Objectives
To understand the importance of limit setting in forensic settings
To address the issue of confidentiality in legal setting
The equal balance of boundaries limits and rights of therapists in both forensic and non forensic
psychotherapy is important. But importance becomes more vital because a forensic psychotherapist is
not just a therapist who works with "difficult" cases. Trainees need to be familiar with all aspects of
forensic practice to understand the complex and often difficult environments in which they (and their
colleagues) have to work. They need to have a clear and practical understanding of what it is their
forensic psychologist colleagues have to do, so their input can be integrated with other aspects of
planning treatment. Equally, forensic psychotherapy is more than just talking to forensic patients.
Balancing empathy with limit setting
While working in forensic /legal settings a therapist encounter the challenge of limit setting and they
ought to remember a word of caution that respect should be two way process. An offender who is
habitual of breaking limits and exploiting other people will definitely try to exploit and will move
beyond set limits. Usually zeal of humanistic therapists ignores the importance of these limits. But a
Balance of empathy, positive regard, compliments, positivity with boundaries, ethical conduct and
firmness is the core idea of therapeutic alliance.
Issue of limit setting has crucial elemental importance in therapeutic process. Therapist has to observe
and create the balance between empathy and limit settings with firmness and consistency. Respect,
dignity and safety of therapist are equally important.
What do we mean by boundaries?
Boundaries can be time related, space related and other psychological limits also include in this
category. And breeching code of conduct is neither beneficial for therapeutic process nor for the client
as in forensic setting a therapist is basically trying to help offenders learn and respect boundaries and
rules, by violating limits a therapist is not helping in right direction and creating disruption in
therapeutic process, infact teaching and reinforcing the breakage of boundaries. Boundaries can be
following types:
Temporal boundaries
Physical boundaries
Psychological boundaries
Professional way of boundary setting
A forensic therapist can enforce limits in following ways:
Not granting extra time, ending session with in time and not extending the session.
Not promising privileges like extra TV watching time e.t.c
Not seeing out of turn or taking a client in extra slot
Not visiting outside professional locations, like if a client asks to meet in Mc Donald'
or try to talk in corridors. Some time it is not safe to view clients outside the
professional/forensic setting.
Safety concerns
What forensic patients have done and are capable of doing must never be forgotten. However, in
secure environments the availability of nursing staff or guards to maintain a watchful presence,
122
img
Forensic Psychology (PSY - 513)
VU
together with physical security aids such as emergency buttons and personal alarms, protect forensic
psychotherapists when seeing patients. In non-secure environments, the task of the forensic
psychotherapist can be made more difficult when there is poor-quality or ambiguous information
about the patient's behaviour between therapy sessions. In these settings, the forensic
psychotherapist must more frequently assess whether the total treatment available has been enough
to prevent destructive acting out.
For Therapist's safety, therapist needs to have control over therapy room and seating
arrangements should not block the way out. Particularly client should not be placed in between
outside door and therapist.
Safety of client is also very important, like a client tells that he/she is going to commit suicide.
Facing such situation what a therapist should do? How to respect the issue of confidentiality?
How to maintain Confidentiality in forensic settings
Forensic psychotherapists are often involved in multi-disciplinary, interagency and medico-legal
work as well as working in settings such as prisons, where they have dual obligations both to their
patients and to their employing authority. Such situations can give rise to conflict with respect to
confidentiality.
To address confidentiality is more important in forensic settings then non forensic settings, because
therapist frequently encounter the clients claiming to possess the weapons with intentions to kill the
co-prisoners. Many times therapist faces the dilemma of client's safety and confidentiality
(planning for suicide) or society's safety and confidentiality (plan of some violent act like murder)
e.g a client has a plan to murder his co prisoner, in this situation therapist has two challenges:
Therapist is to use the therapeutic space and convince the client for not practicing that
hideous job and handover the weapon to the prison staff.
And even after that if therapist is doubtful then it is his responsibility to break the
confidentiality because this is a serious threat to some one's life.
Take another example of a child who has been abused by his uncle, now considering the matter of
confidentiality a therapist will not break the trust of that child but rather will try to boost the confidence
and self esteem of child to inform his parents about the hideous activities of his uncle. Although at first
it is quite difficult for the child, so child is convinced to resist the forlorn stay with uncle.
So in short breaking confidentiality should be the last resort to any problem.
Observing boundaries
It is therapist's duty to observe the boundaries and create a balance.
1. Not a good idea to use client's services ­ outside of professional relationship like fixing a car
engine. By doing this therapist is creating another new boundary and may not be able to enforce
other limits.
2. Therapist should not establish any friendship with client.
3. No gifts should be taken from clients. Infact this boundary should be cleared to client at the start
of the therapeutic relationship.
4. Dual relationships
Therapist should avoid following types of relationships with clients:
5. Any sexual relationship whether it is marital or out of this context. Therapist should understand
their own boundaries and limits and this rule is also applied to x-clients. Research evidences
supports the notion that because of the phenomenon of Transference (Parent like relationship)
a client who enters sexual relationships whether in marriage or out of it, have effects that are
usually experienced by victims of incest.
123
img
Forensic Psychology (PSY - 513)
VU
6. No business dealings
In limit setting a forensic therapist is suppose to:
Impose and enforce boundaries for clients.
Setting boundaries for self
Making those boundaries clear to the client as adherent to therapeutic process.
124
Table of Contents:
  1. INTRODUCTION TO FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY:Future of Forensic Psychology
  2. INTRODUCTION TO FORENSIC PSYCHOOGY:Way of police investigation
  3. FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY AND POLICE:Violent Criminals
  4. POLICE PSYCHOLOGY:Use of excessive force, Corruption, Personnel Selection
  5. POLICE PSYCHOLOGY:Fitness-for-Duty Evaluation (FFDE), False Confessions
  6. INVESTIGATIVE PSYCHOLOGY:For instance, Empirical and logical approach
  7. INVESTIGATIVE PSYCHOLOGY:Crime Scene Investigation, Staging
  8. PSYCHOLOGY OF VIOLENCE:Law of Conservation of Energy, Super ego
  9. PSYCHOANALYTIC MODEL AND VIOLENCE:Fixation at Oral Stage
  10. PSYCHOANALYTIC MODEL AND VIOLENCE:Defense Mechanism, Rationalization
  11. JUNGIAN PSYCHOLOGY AND VIOLENCE:Freudian Methods, JUNGIAN PSYCHOLOGY
  12. JUNGIAN PSYCHOLOGY AND VIOLENCE:Religion and mental illnesses
  13. BEHAVIORIST PERSPECTIVE AND VIOLENCE:Shadow’s violence, Child’s violence
  14. BEHAVIORIST PERSPECTIVE AND VIOLENCE:Operant Conditioning
  15. BEHAVIORIST PERSPECTIVE AND VIOLENCE:Schedules of Punishment
  16. SOCIAL LEARNING MODEL AND VIOLENCE:Observational learning, Vicarious punishment
  17. MORAL DEVELOPMENT AND VIOLENCE:Symbolic functioning, Formal operational stage
  18. BIO-PSYCHO-SOCIAL MODEL:Mental hospitals are factories of abuse
  19. ISLAMIC PERSPECTIVE ABOUT VIOLENCE:Morality is essential
  20. ISLAMIC MODEL:Nafs al-Ammara, Nafs al-Lawwama, Nafs ul Naatiqa
  21. TREATMENTS FOR THE SOUL:Tawba, Sabr o Shukr, Niyyat o Ikhlaas, Taffakkur
  22. CRIMINOGENIC PERSONALITY:Personality Disorders, Common Crimes
  23. CRIMINOGENIC PERSONALITY AND VIOLENCE:Mnemonic, Similarities
  24. CRIMINOGENIC PERSONALITY AND VIOLENCE:Terrorism and Psychopaths
  25. LEARNING DISABILITIES/MENTAL RETARDATION AND VIOLENCE
  26. ASSESSMENT OF PERSONALITY DISORDERS:Reasons for referral, Personality Inventories
  27. ASSESSMENT OF PERSONALITY DISORDERS:Different cutoff scores
  28. RISK ASSESSMENT:Violence reduction scale, Stability of Family upbringing
  29. TREATMENT OF VIOLENT BEHAVIOR / PERSONALITY PSYCHODYNAMIC PSYCHOTHERAPY
  30. JUNGINA THERAPEUTIC MODEL:Limits of re-parenting, Personality Typologies
  31. GROUP THERAPY FOR OFFENDERS:Learning in Groups, Humanistic Groups
  32. PSYCHOTHERAPIES IN FORENSIC SETTINGS:Narrative Therapy
  33. PSYCHOTHERAPIES IN FORENSIC SETTINGS:Solution Focused Therapy
  34. PSYCHOTHERAPIES IN FORENSIC SETTINGS:Avoiding reactance, Externalization
  35. PSYCHOTHERAPY IN FORENSIC SETTINGS AND SPECIAL CHALLENGES
  36. FORENSIC PSYCHOTHERAPY:Exploring therapeutic alliance, Music Therapy
  37. VIOLENCE REDUCTION PROGRAM:Target Population, Lack of motivation
  38. VIOLENCE REDUCTION PROGRAM:Criminal attitude, Interpersonal Aggression
  39. VICTIM SUPPORT:Main features of PTSD, Emotional Support
  40. VICTIM SUPPORT:Debriefing, Desensitization, Eidetic Therapy, Narrative Therapy
  41. SUBSTANCE MISUSE TREATMENT PROGRAM:Marijuana, Unconventional drugs
  42. SUBSTANCE MISUSE TREATMENT PROGRAM:Stages of Change, Homosexuality
  43. EXPERT WITNESS:Insanity Pleas, Sexual Offence Risk, Instructions
  44. COUNTER TERRORISM:Misconceptions, Psychologists & Propaganda war
  45. SUMMING UP FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY:Problems with Risk Assessment, Expert Witness