How psychopathy is associated with the level and change of impulsivity in correctional treatment
A. Voulgaris, P. Briken, E. Stück

TL;DR
This study explores how psychopathy affects impulsivity levels and treatment outcomes in incarcerated men, finding that impulsivity decreases during therapy regardless of psychopathy levels.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into the relationship between psychopathy and impulsivity change during correctional treatment.
Findings
Impulsivity significantly decreased during treatment for both high and low psychopathy groups.
Psychopathy showed strong correlations with impulsivity, especially with specific facets of the PCL-R.
There was no significant difference in impulsivity change between high and low psychopathy groups.
Abstract
Research indicates that psychopathy can hinder treatment success and can lead to dropout. Impulsivity is a complex construct that overlaps with psychopathic personality traits and is often targeted in forensic psychotherapy due to its relation to the risk of reoffending. Our aim was to investigate the overlap between psychopathy and impulsivity and the influence of psychopathic traits on change in impulsivity. We conducted a pre-post-study for measures of psychopathy and impulsivity in men imprisoned for sexual and non-sexual violent offenses. All participants took part in standardized pre- and post-treatment ratings shortly after admission as well as after an average of 19 months (n=370 for pre-rating, n=168 for post-rating). Psychopathy was measured via the PCL-R, impulsivity with the BIS-15. We calculated two-tailed Pearson correlations for BIS-15 Pre-, Post-, and Change Scores…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPsychopathy, Forensic Psychiatry, Sexual Offending · Personality Disorders and Psychopathology · Criminal Justice and Corrections Analysis
