Scientific research since the mid seventies indicate that when treated for drug addiction, many drug-abusing offenders change their attitudes, beliefs and behaviors towards substance abuse, avoid relapse, and successfully remove a life of substance abuse and crime. While it is true that you may need legal pressure on offenders to enter and remain in treatment, once inside the program, many of them, including those who at first were motivated to change, eventually manage to join a process continuous treatment.
In this paper, we present a proposal for treatment for violent offenders with psychopathic traits by analyzing the factors that make these treatments and providing premises and guidelines necessary to impart. Also, expose the factors needed by teams to maximize the effectiveness of treatments and the need for individualized interventions tailored to the issues raised by this population to enable rehabilitation. At the same time, believe that the effectiveness of treatments such offenders may be potentiating including interventions to develop the motivation to change.
Discussion and Analysis
This paper presents a Treatment Proposal for violent aggressors with psychopathic features. We analyze the factors that could hinder treatment process and we establish the premises and actions necessary to be able to implement such treatment. Emphasize the need we also of individual interventions tailored to the problems of this population to make rehabilitation possible and suggest that the effectiveness of this kind of treatment offender be enhanced by the May inclusion of interventions that develop motivation to change. In our society, there are options to reduce or curb the violent behavior of individuals. One of these is the deprivation of liberty in both prisons and mental institutions, with or without chemotherapy or psychotherapeutic interventions. Our system unfortunately has no rehabilitation measures after serving a sentence. It has been in fact finding, due to recidivism, that post-crime measures involving deprivation of liberty of individuals deemed dangerous, it is not effective unless it involves an alternative treatment.
Psychotherapeutic Treatment
The psychotherapeutic treatment may be effective as long as the individual was motivated to change or show at least (It should be noted that we speak in general terms and does not exclude the integration and rehabilitation effective in some cases) receptive to change their behavior. In some countries, the release is contingent on the treatment and change, as well as the obligation to continue treatment in the community. Although not necessary that individuals are motivated, it must be some acceptance to the program as compulsory treatment can be and is ineffective in most cases and generally not conducive to the adherence to it.
Pretreatment Considerations
By the therapist
The therapist cases are perceptive and intuitive but more so with this population. Keep in mind that are not patients who come to the consultation voluntarily acknowledge a problem because it is forced treatment in most cases contingent upon the acquisition of privileges. So being perceptive will help prevent tampering and walk one-step ahead of them anticipating unnecessary ...