Division of Forensic Mental Health, Arnold Lodge, Cordelia Close, Leicester LE5 OLE
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A survey of 50 in-patient forensic health care and prison services in England, Wales and Scotland was employed to evaluate : (a) how severe personality disorder is assessed ; and (b) how assessments compare with recommendations concerning standardised assessment by the Working Group on Psychopathic Disorder (Reed, 1994).
RESULTS
Seventy per cent of services responded, of whom 40% formally assessed personality disorder. Fiftyfour instruments were routinely employed. Assessments of personality structure and cognitive/emotional styles were more common than structured diagnostic instruments or ratings of interpersonal functioning. Of the assessment tools, 25.7% of services provided at least one suggested by Reed (1994).
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
A nationally agreed, focused repertoire of instruments should be encouraged within secure forensic settings offering assessments to individuals with severe personality disorder.
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Within England, Wales and Scotland, individuals with SPD are treated in various in-patient settings including the special hospitals, regional secure units, specialist learning disability units, other NHS or private hospitals and in specialist prison units. A Home Office-Department of Health working party recently published proposals for policy development, Managing Dangerous People with Severe Personality Disorder (Home Office & Department of Health, 1999) considering future policy on legal and service provision for individuals with SPD. The strategy for SPD services in England and Wales is at a crossroads, with consideration being given to a third way, similar to suggestions made in the Ashworth Inquiry (Fallon et al, 1999), where individuals (particularly offenders) with SPD could be assessed and possibly receive treatment within small, high-secure hospital and prison units, using agreed assessment and treatment protocols.
While recommendations of special units to treat SPD may be relatively new, the use of standardised assessments was suggested by the Working Group on Psychopathic Disorder five years ago (Reed, 1994). It argued that assessment of personality disorder should "promote the adoption of multi-method criteria for categorising severe personality disorders" including one or more of the following :
Reed's findings regarding assessment have been endorsed by a Royal College of Psychiatrists' report on SPD (Royal College of Psychiatrists, 1999). However, another report (for the High Security Psychiatric Services Commissioning Board) on diagnostic and assessment criteria in SPD (Meux & McDonald, 1998) acknowledged that current assessment methods remain inadequate and recommended establishing research projects to develop customised assessment tools, neurocognitive instruments and outcome measures. Adopting assessment protocols that assume congruence between individual health care units and specialist prison services would be an important starting point. Such information would also "promote a greater consistency among future clinical and research studies" (Reed, 1994).
Until recently there had been no attempt to examine how individuals with SPD are assessed within various settings. Storey et al (1998) surveyed 250 hospital and penal establishments where individuals with SPD are managed. Their conclusions were limited by a low response rate (39%), but suggested that only half (10/21) of the hospital settings and less than one-fifth (5/29) of the penal settings that responded used a known rating instrument to assess personality structure.
Therefore, the questions to be answered by this study were :
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Five prison units known as specialising in the assessment and treatment of SPD prisoners were also contacted.
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Fourteen services (40%) reported having a formal personality assessment. Seven were regional secure units (31.8% of the regional secure units who responded), two (66.7%) were within special hospital facilities, three (75.0%) were other hospitals, two (66.7%) were specialist prison units but none were learning disability services. In addition, two regional secure units and one learning disability unit used rating instruments routinely but did not regard this as a formal procedure.
Respondents were asked what type of procedure they employed in their assessment of SPD. The results are shown in Table 1. The types of instruments were grouped as Axis II ICD/DSM diagnostic (e.g. International Personality Disorder Examination (IPDE) ; Loranger et al, 1994), non-diagnostic personality assessment (e.g. Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory (MCMI) ; Millon et al, 1997), symptom severity (e.g. General Health Questionnaire ; Goldberg, 1981), any neuropsychological investigations or specific behaviour and attitudinal measures (e.g. anger ; Novaco, 1975). Two units (5.7%), both regional secure units, said they routinely developed a psychodynamic formulation as part of their assessment. Nine (25.7%) providers were, therefore, providing at least one of the recommended assessment tools suggested by the Reed Report (Reed, 1994).
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View this table: [in a new window] | Table 1 Type of routine instruments employed in assessment procedure |
The type of assessment instruments is shown in Fig 1. For the purpose of categorisation, rating instruments measuring specific behaviour, attitudes, emotion or styles of thinking are shown separately.
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Fig. 1. Types of assessment instruments
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Fifty-four different rating instruments were employed routinely. The most frequently used (by three services or more) are shown in Fig. 2.
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Fig. 2. Most frequently employed assessments in routine use. MCMI, Millon
Clinical Multiaxial Inventory (Millon et
al, 1997) ; PCL-R, Psychopathy Check-listrevised
(Hare, 1991) ; WAIS, Wechsler
Adult Intelligence Schedule (Wechsler,
1981) ; MMPI, Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory profiles
(Dahlstrom et al, 1975) ;
Culture-free Self-Esteem Inventory (Battle,
1992) ; PDQ, Personality Diagnostic Questionnaire
(Hyler, 1994) ; CIRCLE, Chart
of Interpersonal Reactions in Closed Living Environments
(Blackburn & Renwick, 1996)
; Anger Control (Novaco, 1975)
; Readiness to change (Rollnick et al,
1992).
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Two conclusions suggested by the findings are that first, personality disorder is not formally assessed by the majority of forensic units who may admit individuals with SPD ; and second, even when formal assessment occurs, it may be inadequate or lacking in fundamental areas. Taking the elements of the assessment recommended by Reed (1994) and standard (structured interview for diagnosis, PCL-R, MMPI-type profile and psychodynamic formulation), only one unit (a regional secure unit) provided this though a quarter of all units had adopted some aspect of the recommended assessment procedure. Such findings will not be surprising to most clinicians and have been acknowledged for some time (Dolan & Coid, 1993 ; Meux & McDonald, 1998).
What is striking is the range of instruments used to assess SPD, both in terms of the absolute number of different ratings (n=54) and the variety, from three different assessments for diagnosis to nine different non-diagnostic ratings of personality structure. The numerous tools for assessing emotional states or attitudes is possibly understandable considering the wide range of target affects or attitudes, though the paucity of interpersonal ratings is surprising given the nature of SPD.
However, four different instruments were used to assess anger/hostility and three for impulsivity. This diversity may reflect assessors' preference in addition to the occasional requirement for specific measures. Nonetheless, there is overlap between some instruments and therefore scope for adopting standard assessments allowing comparison between units or settings for an individual over time.
Despite the large number of different instruments, only nine tools were used by three units or more. The popularity of self-report instruments, such as the MCMI (Millon et al, 1997) or the Personality Diagnostic Questionnaire (PDQ) (Hyler, 1994), at the apparent expense of other structured clinical assessment instruments (Structure Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (SCID-II) ; First et al, 1995 ; or the IPDE ; Loranger et al, 1994) is concerning, especially since underreporting or overreporting of Axis II psychopathology is a known problem associated with self-report instruments (Hunt & Andrews, 1992). The Royal College of Psychiatrists (1999) recently warned against the use of self-report ratings for making personality disorder diagnoses, though accepted their role in screening. The adoption of the PCL-R (Hare, 1991) as a useful assessment of psychopathy within forensic settings probably reflects its clinical utility, particularly as an apparent predictor of recidivism.
In conclusion, two proposals should be considered. First, structured (non-self-rated) diagnostic assessment of Axis II psychopathology should be employed as a prerequisite to other dimensional assessments of personality structure. Second, it is time for a moratorium on the use of so many differing assessments of behaviour, affect, cognitive and attitudinal styles of individuals with SPD in favour of a first-line, nationally agreed, focused repertoire of instruments. Such suggestions will require compromise but only then can individuals with SPD be evaluated with the "greater consistency" that Reed (1994) desired.
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