Abstract
Structured professional judgement (SPJ) checklists are widely used to assess reoffending risk in individuals convicted of sexual offending (ICSOs), but a few prospective studies have evaluated real-world predictive accuracy. We present a Danish prospective field study of clinician SPJ checklist ratings (SVR-20, RSVP and HCR-20), the PCL-R and clinician summary risk ratings (CSRRs) among 96 male ICSOs assessed 1997–2001. The findings suggested moderate-to-high SVR-20 and RSVP predictive validity for sexual reoffending at 2- and 5-year follow-ups (AUCs = 0.69–0.72), but declining accuracy for 10-year predictions (AUCs = 0.63–0.64). The HCR-20 and PCL-R predicted sexual reoffending less accurately (p < 0.05) than the SVR-20. All measures had moderate-to-high predictive accuracy for any, severe and recurrent violent reoffending (AUCs = 0.67–0.85). Notably, CSRRs performed well (AUCs = 0.67–0.80) across outcomes and periods. Despite overestimation of absolute sexual reoffending, SVR-20 and RSVP were supported for ICSO reoffending risk within 5-year follow-ups.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Journal | Journal of Sexual Aggression |
| ISSN | 1355-2600 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Accepted/In press - 2025 |
Keywords
- field study
- risk assessment
- RSVP
- sexual reoffending
- Structured professional judgment (SPJ)
- SVR-20
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