Testosterone, Sexual Offense Recidivism, and Treatment Effect Among Adult Male Sex Offenders

The relationship between serum testosterone and sexual violence was examined in a sample of 501 convicted adult male sex offenders attending an intensive in-hospital group psychotherapy treatment program. It was found that men with higher testosterone tended to have committed the most invasive sexua...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sexual abuse 2005-04, Vol.17 (2), p.171-181
Hauptverfasser: Studer, Lea H., Aylwin, A. Scott, Reddon, John R.
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Aylwin, A. Scott
Reddon, John R.
description The relationship between serum testosterone and sexual violence was examined in a sample of 501 convicted adult male sex offenders attending an intensive in-hospital group psychotherapy treatment program. It was found that men with higher testosterone tended to have committed the most invasive sexual crimes (p < .001, two-tailed). Further, a positive partial correlation (controlling for age) between testosterone and sexual offense recidivism over a lengthy follow-up period (mean = 8.9 years) was found. When the sample was separated into one group that completed treatment and one group that did not, an important ameliorating treatment effect was observed. Although controlling for age, serum testosterone remained significantly predictive of sexual recidivism for the treatment noncompleter group (p < .05, two-tailed). For those who completed treatment testosterone was no longer predictive of sexual reoffense (p > .05, two-tailed). Among convicted sex offenders, higher serum testosterone appears to be associated with greater likelihood of further sexual violence. Effective therapy, however, appears able to intercede in the influence of testosterone on sexually deviant behavior. It is suggested that serum testosterone may be an informative static risk factor and completion of intensive treatment should be accorded significance in future actuarially based risk prediction instruments.
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Although controlling for age, serum testosterone remained significantly predictive of sexual recidivism for the treatment noncompleter group (p &lt; .05, two-tailed). For those who completed treatment testosterone was no longer predictive of sexual reoffense (p &gt; .05, two-tailed). Among convicted sex offenders, higher serum testosterone appears to be associated with greater likelihood of further sexual violence. Effective therapy, however, appears able to intercede in the influence of testosterone on sexually deviant behavior. 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source MEDLINE; 2022 ECC(Springer); SAGE Journals; Alma/SFX Local Collection; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Adult
Alberta
Androgens
Criminal Psychology
Deviance
Follow-Up Studies
Humans
Male
Males
Paraphilias
Predictions
Psychotherapy, Group - methods
Recidivism
Risk Factors
Secondary Prevention
Severity of Illness Index
Sex crimes
Sex offenders
Sex Offenses - prevention & control
Sex Offenses - psychology
Testosterone
Testosterone - blood
Time Factors
Treatment Outcome
Treatment programs
title Testosterone, Sexual Offense Recidivism, and Treatment Effect Among Adult Male Sex Offenders
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