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Journal Article

Citation

Levesque DA, Ciavatta MM, Castle PH, Prochaska JM, Prochaska JO. Psychol. Violence 2012; 2(4): 368-684.

Affiliation

Pro-Change Behavior Systems, Inc., P.O. Box 755, West Kingston, RI 02892.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, American Psychological Association)

DOI

10.1037/a0027501

PMID

23412627

PMCID

PMC3569030

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Research assessing the efficacy of court-mandated domestic violence treatment continues to yield inconsistent results. The current study examined whether Journey to Change, a Transtheoretical Model of Behavior Change-based treatment adjunct that consists of three computer-administered sessions and a print guide, could improve outcomes. METHOD: 492 male domestic violence offenders attending court-mandated batterer treatment were assigned to Usual Care (UC) or Usual Care + Journey to Change (UC + Journey). RESULTS: Compared to UC, participants receiving UC + Journey were significantly more likely to be in the Action stage at the end of treatment, and to seek help and services outside of group. Based on victim reports, the UC + Journey group was significantly less likely than UC to engage in physical violence during the 12-month follow-up. Both groups were equally likely to drop out of court-mandated treatment and to have further domestic violence-related police involvement. However, among participants with police involvement, the UC + Journey group had lower rates of documented violence and physical injury. CONCLUSIONS: The pattern of findings across the multiple outcomes suggests that the Journey to Change program holds promise for improving some outcomes for domestic violence offenders in treatment, and warrants further investigation.


Language: en

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