The Effect of Gender on the Outcome of Forensic Psychiatric Assessment in Sweden: A Case Vignette Study
BACKGROUND:
Previous
research suggests that female violent offenders at risk of a prison sentence
are more likely than their male counterparts to be assessed as having mental
health problems of a nature or degree that would lead to a court requirement
for hospital treatment.
AIMS/HYPOTHESES:
To
test the hypothesis that there is bias towards hospital disposal of female
compared with male violent offenders with mental disorder.
METHODS:
In
Sweden, the National Board of Forensic Medicine oversees all assessments of
mental disorder for the criminal courts. Twenty-six Board appointed forensic
psychiatrists, psychologists and social workers each independently assessed six
case vignettes for fit with criteria for 'severe mental disorder', a
prerequisite for hospital disposal from court. Each gender neutral vignette
described a person who had been convicted of serious assault and had a major
mental disorder. A gender was then assigned to each offender randomly within a
block design, thus varying between sets. Participants were blind to the main
aim of the study and the gender variation.
RESULTS:
There was
no significant association between gender of the person assessed and judgement
that s/he had a 'severe mental disorder'. An offender depicted as having mental
retardation was more likely to be assessed as at high risk of criminal
recidivism if portrayed as female, regardless of the sex, place of work or
level of experience of the assessor.
CONCLUSION:
We
found no evidence of gender bias in determining appropriateness of a hospital
disposal of an offender with mental disorder. The difference in assessment of
recidivism according to sex of the patient was only in relation to mental
retardation; further research would be needed to able to interpret this. As
researchers in other countries have reported gender bias in disposals from
court, our findings may provide support for a centralised forensic psychiatric
assessment board and formal, on-going training.
- 1National Board of Forensic Medicine and Karolinska Institutet, Sweden.
- 2Stockholm University, Sweden.
- 3S:t Göran's Hospital and Forensic Psychiatry Care Stockholm, Sweden.
- 4Karolinska Institutet, Sweden.
- 5Sundsvall Forensic Psychiatric Hospital and Karolinska Institutet, Sweden.
- 6National Board of Forensic Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, and Stockholm University.
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