Healthcare needs and risk in police custody

Police custody is an area of scholarly research that has previously been overlooked. Whilst the research and literature regarding this topic begins to grow, there still remains a wide variety of aspects to be considered. Chapter One presents a general introduction to the topic. Chapter Two presents...

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Main Author: Thorley, Grace M.
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/44448/
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author Thorley, Grace M.
author_facet Thorley, Grace M.
author_sort Thorley, Grace M.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Police custody is an area of scholarly research that has previously been overlooked. Whilst the research and literature regarding this topic begins to grow, there still remains a wide variety of aspects to be considered. Chapter One presents a general introduction to the topic. Chapter Two presents a literature review following a systematic approach regarding the healthcare needs of those detained in police custody. The findings revealed that there is a considerable presence of mental health, substance misuse, and physical health care needs amongst police custody detainees. Chapter Three presents a critique of an impulsivity measure, the Barratt Impulsiveness Scale (BIS-11). The concluding remarks reported that further research is essential in examining the psychometric properties amongst forensic populations. The indications regarding reliability and validity are supportive, although further evidence considering the effectiveness of this tool for decision-making would be beneficial. Chapter Four, an empirical study, examined the prevalence of impulsivity, self-harm, and situational aggression amongst detainees. In addition, the predictive validity of one of the National Strategy for Police Information Systems (NSPIS) risk assessment was reviewed. This study identified that impulsivity traits are highly prevalent amongst detainees (for the non-planning impulsiveness subtrait); for self-harmers, their function of this behaviour was identified as ‘self-punishment’; and 40% engaged in some form of aggressive behaviour throughout their detention. The NSPIS risk assessment has significant predictive value, although with the additional of one Dynamic Appraisal of Situational Aggression (DASA) assessment and the BIS-11 total score, the predictability increases by 21%. A single case study in Chapter Five considers the effectiveness of Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT)-informed skills training in the community. This individual displayed borderline personality disorder traits and exhibited self-harming behaviours. The difficulties associated with working with such a client group have been discussed. In Chapter Six, a discussion concludes the thesis.
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spelling nottingham-444482025-02-28T13:50:02Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/44448/ Healthcare needs and risk in police custody Thorley, Grace M. Police custody is an area of scholarly research that has previously been overlooked. Whilst the research and literature regarding this topic begins to grow, there still remains a wide variety of aspects to be considered. Chapter One presents a general introduction to the topic. Chapter Two presents a literature review following a systematic approach regarding the healthcare needs of those detained in police custody. The findings revealed that there is a considerable presence of mental health, substance misuse, and physical health care needs amongst police custody detainees. Chapter Three presents a critique of an impulsivity measure, the Barratt Impulsiveness Scale (BIS-11). The concluding remarks reported that further research is essential in examining the psychometric properties amongst forensic populations. The indications regarding reliability and validity are supportive, although further evidence considering the effectiveness of this tool for decision-making would be beneficial. Chapter Four, an empirical study, examined the prevalence of impulsivity, self-harm, and situational aggression amongst detainees. In addition, the predictive validity of one of the National Strategy for Police Information Systems (NSPIS) risk assessment was reviewed. This study identified that impulsivity traits are highly prevalent amongst detainees (for the non-planning impulsiveness subtrait); for self-harmers, their function of this behaviour was identified as ‘self-punishment’; and 40% engaged in some form of aggressive behaviour throughout their detention. The NSPIS risk assessment has significant predictive value, although with the additional of one Dynamic Appraisal of Situational Aggression (DASA) assessment and the BIS-11 total score, the predictability increases by 21%. A single case study in Chapter Five considers the effectiveness of Dialectical Behaviour Therapy (DBT)-informed skills training in the community. This individual displayed borderline personality disorder traits and exhibited self-harming behaviours. The difficulties associated with working with such a client group have been discussed. In Chapter Six, a discussion concludes the thesis. 2017-12-15 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/44448/9/THORLEY%20Grace%20May%204168222%20%282%29.pdf application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/44448/1/4168222%20GThorley%20Academic%20Thesis%20Online%20Submission%20July%202017.pdf Thorley, Grace M. (2017) Healthcare needs and risk in police custody. DForenPsy thesis, University of Nottingham. Police Custody Healthcare DBT Treatment Intervention BIS-11 Impulsivity Self-Harm
spellingShingle Police Custody
Healthcare
DBT
Treatment
Intervention
BIS-11
Impulsivity
Self-Harm
Thorley, Grace M.
Healthcare needs and risk in police custody
title Healthcare needs and risk in police custody
title_full Healthcare needs and risk in police custody
title_fullStr Healthcare needs and risk in police custody
title_full_unstemmed Healthcare needs and risk in police custody
title_short Healthcare needs and risk in police custody
title_sort healthcare needs and risk in police custody
topic Police Custody
Healthcare
DBT
Treatment
Intervention
BIS-11
Impulsivity
Self-Harm
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/44448/