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Journal Article

Citation

Junginger J. Behav. Sci. Law 2006; 24(3): 295-311.

Affiliation

Veterans' Administration Maryland Health Care System, University of Maryland School of Medicine, 10 North Greene Street (Suite 6C-139), Baltimore, MD 21201, USA. john.junginger@med.va.gov

Copyright

(Copyright © 2006, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/bsl.682

PMID

16773647

Abstract

Some patients with serious mental illness appear to respond violently to the same delusional content throughout the course of their illness. Anecdotal, empirical, and theoretical evidence is presented establishing the premise of "stereotypic" delusional offending. A method for measuring the similarity of two delusions separated in time also is presented. An empirical focus on stereotypic delusional offending may help identify more accurately persons at risk for violence and those at risk for becoming targets of violence. It also may provide a better understanding of successful treatment of outpatient violence and conceivably could inform the ongoing debate on involuntary outpatient commitment laws. Among the major issues of this debate in the United States are the potential benefits of a forced medication provision. One rationale for such a provision may be found in the treatment response of seriously mentally ill outpatients whose violent behavior appears inescapably tied to their persistent or recurrent delusions.


Language: en

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