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Child Maltreatment
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Treatment Outcome and Criminal Offending by Youth With Sexual Behavior Problems

Elizabeth J. Letourneau

Medical University of South Carolina, letournej{at}musc.edu

Jason E. Chapman

Medical University of South Carolina

Sonja K. Schoenwald

Medical University of South Carolina

Children and adolescents treated for general delinquency problems and rated by caregivers as having sexual behavior problems (SBP; N = 696) were compared with youth from the same sample with no sexual behavior problems (NSBP; N = 1,185). Treatment outcome through 12-months posttreatment and criminal offending through an average 48-month posttreatment were compared for both groups. It was hypothesized that both groups would improve over time; however, the SBP group would evidence greater psychopathology at follow-up, and these hypotheses were supported. It was further hypothesized that youth with SBP would not differ from youth with NSBP in rates of future sexual or nonsexual offenses. These hypotheses were also supported. SBP group membership was not a significant predictive factor in analyses modeling future offending (any) or future person offenses. Few youth in either group had sexual offenses. The importance of these findings for clinical and policy decision making is discussed.

Key Words: adolescent • child • recidivism • sexual behavior problems • treatment outcome

Child Maltreatment, Vol. 13, No. 2, 133-144 (2008)
DOI: 10.1177/1077559507306717


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Home page
Child MaltreatHome page
J. F. Silovsky and E. J. Letourneau
Introduction to Special Issue on Children With Sexual Behavior Problems: Dedicated to William F. Friedrich, PhD
Child Maltreat, May 1, 2008; 13(2): 107 - 109.
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