Antisocial Personality Disorder (APD) is a condition largely represented in detention centers where can reach a prevalence of 60% in male prisoners. The objective of this study is to identify the clinical and demographic factors that differentiate subjects with APD and hosted in penitentiary with respect to those are treated in outpatient psychiatric clinics. We recruited 65 male patients affected by APD, whose 26 were followed up in community mental health services and 39 were serving their sentence in a detention center located in Monza. Socio-demographic and clinical data were obtained through a review of the clinical charts, and interviews with patients or their relatives (if available). We performed descriptive analyses on the total sample, then we compared the two groups identified by the type of setting (outpatient clinic vs. penitentiary) by independent sample t tests (quantitative variables) or χ2 tests (qualitative ones). For qualitative variables odds ratios (ORs) were also calculated. Outpatients with APD (with respect to those hosted in the detention center) resulted: to be older (p =.02), to be less likely married (p =.01), to have more pre-onset psychiatric comorbidity (p =.05), to have more pre-onset substance poly-misuse (p =.01), to have more previous psychiatric hospitalizations (p <.01), and to be less likely to have received lifetime psychotherapy (p <.01). Globally, the results of this study show how the presence of psychiatric comorbidity or substance abuse (with the probable access to psychiatric services) before the onset of APD prevents imprisonment. This aspect is even more surprising when we consider that the two groups of patients show no differences in the frequency of crimes. Future research will have to confirm if early mental health care can really limit the access to penitentiary of subjects affected by APD.

Esposito, C., Ceresa, A., Auxilia, A., Zanelli Quarantini, F., Caldiroli, A., Capuzzi, E., et al. (2022). Which Clinical and Demographic Factors are Related to Incarceration in Male Patients With Antisocial Personality Disorder?. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OFFENDER THERAPY AND COMPARATIVE CRIMINOLOGY [10.1177/0306624X221139073].

Which Clinical and Demographic Factors are Related to Incarceration in Male Patients With Antisocial Personality Disorder?

Auxilia A. M.;Capuzzi E.;Clerici M.;
2022

Abstract

Antisocial Personality Disorder (APD) is a condition largely represented in detention centers where can reach a prevalence of 60% in male prisoners. The objective of this study is to identify the clinical and demographic factors that differentiate subjects with APD and hosted in penitentiary with respect to those are treated in outpatient psychiatric clinics. We recruited 65 male patients affected by APD, whose 26 were followed up in community mental health services and 39 were serving their sentence in a detention center located in Monza. Socio-demographic and clinical data were obtained through a review of the clinical charts, and interviews with patients or their relatives (if available). We performed descriptive analyses on the total sample, then we compared the two groups identified by the type of setting (outpatient clinic vs. penitentiary) by independent sample t tests (quantitative variables) or χ2 tests (qualitative ones). For qualitative variables odds ratios (ORs) were also calculated. Outpatients with APD (with respect to those hosted in the detention center) resulted: to be older (p =.02), to be less likely married (p =.01), to have more pre-onset psychiatric comorbidity (p =.05), to have more pre-onset substance poly-misuse (p =.01), to have more previous psychiatric hospitalizations (p <.01), and to be less likely to have received lifetime psychotherapy (p <.01). Globally, the results of this study show how the presence of psychiatric comorbidity or substance abuse (with the probable access to psychiatric services) before the onset of APD prevents imprisonment. This aspect is even more surprising when we consider that the two groups of patients show no differences in the frequency of crimes. Future research will have to confirm if early mental health care can really limit the access to penitentiary of subjects affected by APD.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Antisocial Personality Disorder; clinical features; incarceration;
English
10-dic-2022
2022
none
Esposito, C., Ceresa, A., Auxilia, A., Zanelli Quarantini, F., Caldiroli, A., Capuzzi, E., et al. (2022). Which Clinical and Demographic Factors are Related to Incarceration in Male Patients With Antisocial Personality Disorder?. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OFFENDER THERAPY AND COMPARATIVE CRIMINOLOGY [10.1177/0306624X221139073].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/425539
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