Specialist group therapy for firesetting behaviour: evidence of a treatment effect from a non-randomised pilot trial with male prisoners
Journal article
Gannon, T., Alleyne, E., Butler, H., Danby, H., Kapoor, A., Lovell, T., Ozcakir Mozova, K., Spruin, L., Tostevin, T., Tyler, N. and O'Ciardha, C. 2015. Specialist group therapy for firesetting behaviour: evidence of a treatment effect from a non-randomised pilot trial with male prisoners. Behaviour Research and Therapy. 73, pp. 42-51. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.brat.2015.07.007
Authors | Gannon, T., Alleyne, E., Butler, H., Danby, H., Kapoor, A., Lovell, T., Ozcakir Mozova, K., Spruin, L., Tostevin, T., Tyler, N. and O'Ciardha, C. |
---|---|
Abstract | Despite huge societal costs associated with firesetting, no standardized therapy has been developed to address this hugely damaging behavior. This study reports the evaluation of the first standardized CBT group designed specifically to target deliberate firesetting in male prisoners (the Firesetting Intervention Programme for Prisoners; FIPP). Fifty-four male prisoners who had set a deliberate fire were referred for FIPP treatment by their prison establishment and psychologically assessed at baseline, immediately post treatment, and three-months post treatment. Prisoners who were treatment eligible yet resided at prison establishments not identified for FIPP treatment were recruited as Treatment as Usual controls and tested at equivalent time-points. Results showed that FIPP participants improved on one of three primary outcomes (i.e., problematic fire interest and associations with fire), and made some improvement on secondary outcomes (i.e., attitudes towards violence and antisocial attitudes) post treatment relative to controls. Most notable gains were made on the primary outcome of fire interest and associations with fire and individuals who gained in this area tended to self-report more serious firesetting behavior. FIPP participants maintained all key improvements at three-month follow up. These outcomes suggest that CBT should be targeted at those holding the most serious firesetting history. |
Year | 2015 |
Journal | Behaviour Research and Therapy |
Journal citation | 73, pp. 42-51 |
Publisher | Elsevier |
ISSN | 0005-7967 |
Digital Object Identifier (DOI) | https://doi.org/10.1016/j.brat.2015.07.007 |
Publication dates | |
Online | 16 Jul 2015 |
Oct 2015 | |
Publication process dates | |
Deposited | 16 Jun 2016 |
Accepted | 14 Jul 2015 |
Accepted author manuscript | License |
Output status | Published |
https://repository.canterbury.ac.uk/item/87vyy/specialist-group-therapy-for-firesetting-behaviour-evidence-of-a-treatment-effect-from-a-non-randomised-pilot-trial-with-male-prisoners
Download files
Accepted author manuscript
330
total views553
total downloads6
views this month2
downloads this month