RT Article T1 Forensic psychotherapy and psychological therapies in forensic mental health settings JF Seminars in forensic psychiatry SP 343 OP 361 A1 Adshead, Gwen 1960- A2 Marshall, John LA English YR 2024 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1918781362 AB "Forensic psychotherapy" is a shorthand term for the treatment of offenders with psychodynamic psychotherapy. Over the last decade, a range of psychological therapies for offenders have been developed, often based on improved therapies for personality disorder. The author discusses what distinguishes forensic psychotherapy from other psychological therapies offered to offenders; and which offenders might benefit most from psychodynamically focussed therapy. The author describes how psychological treatments broadly fit within the risk needs responsivity construct and the matched stepped care system. Matched stepped care and an appropriate governance framework ensure services deliver evidence-based practices, targeting underlying needs. Clear treatment pathways exist, low- to high-intensity interventions are provided with good fidelity and the right people skills are in place to deliver these interventions. The requirement to step up in intensity and expertise level of treatment is based on a clinical formulation and risk. Having the right service in the right place at the right time delivered by the right professional is critical to reducing risk among people who are violent. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 359-361 SN 9781911623816 K1 Forensic Psychotherapy K1 Psychodynamic K1 Risk needs responsivity K1 Matched stepped care K1 Psychotherapy matrix