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El. knyga: Assessing and Managing Problematic Sexual Interests: A Practitioner's Guide

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Assessing and Managing Problematic Sexual Interests: A Practitioner’s Guide provides a thorough review of atypical sexual interests and offers various ways through which they can be measured and controlled, including compassion-focused and psychoanalytic approaches.

This unique guide presents a detailed analysis of deviant sexual interest. Part I, 'Assessment,' overviews the range of sexual interests and fantasies in men and women. Part II, 'Management,' investigates the cutting-edge tools, approaches, interventions, and treatment advances used in a variety of settings to control deviant sexual interest. In Part III, 'Approaches to assessment and management', the authors consider how females with sexual convictions can be assessed and how offence paralelling behaviour can be used for assessment and treatment. Throughout, Assessing and Managing Problematic Sexual Interests offers necessary perspectives and emerging research from international experts at the forefront of this field.

With a thorough assessment of current research and a critical overview of treatment advances for problematic sexual interests, Assessing and Managing Problematic Sexual Interests is an essential resource for clinical and forensic psychologists, probation officers, academics, students working in the field, and members of allied professional fields.

Recenzijos

For readers seeking new perspectives from established authors, this volume is the best to come along for several years. My copy will reside in the closest shelf to my desk. - David Prescott in Sexual Abuse, the official journal of the Association for the Treatment of Sexual Abusers

Contributors xi
Series foreword xvii
Richard Shuker
Geraldine Akerman
Foreword xxi
Anthony Beech
PART I Assessment
1(130)
1 How do sexual interests cluster and relate to sexual offending behaviours against children?
3(20)
Sarah Paquette
Sebastien Brouillette-Alarie
Introduction
3(4)
The current study
7(11)
Conclusion
18(1)
References
18(5)
2 Exploring and assessing the current sexual interest of men who have committed sexual and non-sexual violent offences
23(18)
Geraldine Akerman
Jennifer Hardy
Paul Hamilton
Introduction
23(1)
Background
24(6)
Method
30(2)
Procedure
32(1)
Results
33(4)
References
37(4)
3 The role of PPG in sexological assessment and treatment of sexual offenders: a comparison of British and Czech practice
41(16)
Derek Perkins
Marek Pav
Petia Skrivankova
Introduction
41(1)
Materials and methods
42(1)
Results
42(9)
Discussion: comparison of both practice systems
51(1)
Conclusion
52(1)
References
53(4)
4 Using the Explicit and Implicit Sexual Interest Profile in applied forensic or clinical contexts
57(26)
Alexander F. Schmidt
Derek Perkins
Paraphilic interests in forensic contexts
57(1)
Indirect latency-based measures of sexual interest in children
58(8)
Testing single cases with the Explicit and Implicit Sexual Interest Profile
66(7)
Using the Explicit and Implicit Sexual Interest Profile in court
73(5)
Conclusion
78(1)
Notes
78(1)
References
79(4)
5 Using the Rapid Serial Visual Presentation to detect sexual interest
83(18)
Angelo Zappala
Pekka Santtila
Why it is important to detect deviant sexual interest and how to detect it
83(1)
Attention-based measurement procedures
84(1)
Rapid Serial Visual Presentation procedure
85(1)
The attentional blink phenomenon
86(1)
Dual-target Rapid Serial Visual Presentation (dtRSPV) as an attention-based measurement procedure to detect Deviant Sexual Interest (DSI)
87(6)
Future directions
93(3)
Notes
96(1)
References
96(5)
6 Using eye-related measures to assess sexual interest
101(14)
Charlotte Wesson
Todd E. Hogue
Previously used assessments for sexual preference
102(2)
Measuring sexual preference with eye-tracking
104(3)
Measuring sexual preference using pupil dilation
107(2)
Limitations to eye-tracking
109(1)
Key conclusions and summary of recommendations for best practice
110(1)
References
111(4)
7 Sexual fantasy use as a proxy for assessing deviant sexual interest
115(16)
Ross M. Bartels
Introduction
115(1)
Sexual fantasy versus sexual fantasizing
116(1)
The role of sexual fantasizing in sex offending
117(1)
Assessing sexual fantasy use
118(6)
Issues and recommendations
124(2)
Conclusion
126(1)
Note
126(1)
References
126(5)
PART II Management
131(84)
8 The treatment of sexual deviance within a therapeutic setting
133(16)
Jayson Ware
Meagan Donaldson
Danielle Matsuo
Introduction
133(1)
Treatment philosophy
134(4)
Description of strategies and exercises
138(7)
Summary
145(1)
References
145(4)
9 Compassion and acceptance as interventions for paraphilic disorders and sexual offending behaviour
149(22)
Jamie S. Walton
Kerensa Hocken
First wave
150(2)
Second wave
152(1)
The third wave: principles of relational frame theory and an evolutionary functional perspective
153(5)
ACT and CFT and their potential usefulness as therapies for paraphilia and offending
158(1)
ACT
158(4)
CFT
162(2)
A brief summary of ACT and CFT outcomes in mental health
164(1)
Compassion and acceptance integrated into contemporary rehabilitation practice
164(2)
Conclusion
166(1)
Note
166(1)
References
166(5)
10 A psychoanalytic approach to paraphilic disorders, perversions and other problematic sexual behaviours
171(22)
Jessica Yakeley
Introduction
171(1)
Forensic psychotherapy
172(1)
Paraphilias, paraphilic disorders and perversions-diagnostic controversy and confusion
173(3)
Psychoanalytic theories of perversion
176(5)
Perversion and paraphilic disorders: a contemporary clinical theory
181(2)
Psychoanalytically informed treatment of paraphilic disorders and perversions
183(1)
Challenges of treatment
184(6)
Conclusion
190(1)
Notes
191(1)
References
191(2)
11 Medication to manage problematic sexual arousal
193(22)
Emma Marshall
Belinda Winder
Christine Norman
Nicholas Blagden
Introduction
193(3)
Measurements of problematic sexual arousal
196(1)
Clinical interviews
197(1)
Self-report measures of symptoms
197(1)
Self-report measures of consequences
198(1)
Comorbidity and wellbeing
198(2)
Psychological treatment of individuals convicted of sexual offences
200(1)
Medication to manage problematic sexual arousal
200(2)
Types of medication
202(1)
Hormonal therapy medications
202(1)
Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors
203(1)
Side effects of medication
203(1)
Medication guidelines
204(1)
Evidence of effectiveness
204(3)
Conclusion
207(1)
References
208(7)
PART III Approaches to assessment and management
215(60)
12 Introducing the multi-component framework of female sexual offending
217(34)
Rachel Worthington
The extent of the problem-female perpetrators and their victims
217(2)
Females who offend using the Internet
219(1)
Theories of female sexual offending
220(2)
Gender equivalence
222(2)
Gendered perspectives - what does it mean to be female?
224(3)
Treatment
227(2)
Female sexual offending - where are we now?
229(2)
Introducing the multi-component framework of female sexual offending
231(15)
Conclusion
246(1)
References
247(4)
13 Trauma, adverse experiences, and offence-paralleling behaviour in the assessment and management of sexual interest
251(24)
Lawrence Jones
Developmental accounts of offending
252(4)
Internal working models
256(1)
Links between trauma and offending
257(2)
Offence paralleling behaviour, trauma and the self-regulation model
259(1)
Trauma triggers
259(5)
Trauma triggers and OPB linked to sexual interest risk domains
264(1)
Sexual preoccupation
264(2)
Sexual preference for prepubescent or pubescent children
266(1)
Sexualized violence
267(1)
Paraphilic interest
268(1)
Illustrative fictional case example-Chris
269(2)
Conclusion
271(1)
References
272(3)
Index 275
Geraldine Akerman is a Chartered and Registered Forensic Psychologist and Therapy Manager at HMP Grendon. She is a Visiting Lecturer at the University of Birmingham, UK and Honorary Professor of Cardiff Metropolitan University, UK and Chair Elect of the Division of Forensic Psychology.

Derek Perkins is a Clinical and Forensic Psychologist at Royal Holloway University of London, UK and Broadmoor Hospital, and Co-Director of onlinePROTECT.

Ross M. Bartels is Senior Lecturer in Forensic Psychology and member of the Forensic and Clinical Research Group at the University of Lincoln, UK.