Study Results
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Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
270 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2013-05-31
2016-07-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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After the study was approved by the Head of the General Directorate of Reintegration and Prison Services of the Portuguese Ministry of Justice, a list of potential participants who did not meet the exclusion criteria was made available to the research team by psychologists from the justice system. Next, a large sample of participants was randomly selected using a random number table by a research assistant who was blind to any personal information about each inmate. Then, a first meeting between the research team and the randomized inmates occurred, in which researchers invited inmates to participate voluntarily. In this meeting, researchers explained the goals of the study and presented a brief overview of the intervention program. It was also explained to inmates that their participation in the study would not impact their sentencing in any way.
Participants who agreed to participate, gave written informed consent, completed the baseline assessment, and were randomly assigned to treatment conditions (treatment and control groups) using a random number table by a research assistant who was blind to any information about each participant. Afterwards, the research team informed the psychologists in each prison of the result of the randomization so that GPS could be initiated. Participants in the control group were informed that they would be offered the GPS treatment after the study's completion (including the follow-up period).
Besides baseline assessment, participants completed the mid-assessment (after the 20th session of the program), post-treatment assessment (at the end of GPS) and follow-up assessment (12 months after GPS completion). Staff who conducted randomization did not serve as therapists or accessors, and accessors were blind to condition assignment. Respondent-specific codes were used to link the data from one time-point to the next one.
GPS's facilitators were chosen among the psychologists who already had training and experience in delivering the program with inmates (who were not selected for this study). In order to assure program integrity and consistency, facilitators received regular supervision by the research team (including the program's main author) during the time GPS was run in prisons. Moreover, the program's structured and manualized design ensures integrity, at least partially.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
SINGLE
Study Groups
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Growing Pro-Social (GPS) program
The Growing Pro-Social (GPS) program is a cognitive-behavioral group program for offenders. GPS is based on schema therapy, which conceptualizes aggressiveness as a result of a distorted view of the self and of the others. The ultimate goal of the GPS is to promote change in dysfunctional core beliefs about the self and the others.
GPS consists of 40 sessions, each lasting about 90 minutes. Sessions must be carried out by two therapists who should be skillful in schema therapy. Sessions are grouped into five modules: (1) human communication, (2) interpersonal relationships, (3) cognitive distortions, (4) function and meaning of emotions, and (5) early maladaptive schemas.
The treatment group attended the GPS program in addition to the Treatment AsUsual (TAU) delivered at Portuguese prisons.
Growing Pro-Social Program
GPS is a structured cognitive-behavioral group program aimed to reduce the prominence of early maladaptive schemas
Treatment As Usual
TAU in Portuguese prisons is primarily aimed to increase educational and professional qualifications
Treatment As Usual
Subjects in this group received Treatment As Usual in Portuguese prisons (supervision of school frequency, occupational and job-related tasks and sentence planning supervision over time) and did not attend the GPS program or any other structured program during the research period.
Treatment As Usual
TAU in Portuguese prisons is primarily aimed to increase educational and professional qualifications
Interventions
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Growing Pro-Social Program
GPS is a structured cognitive-behavioral group program aimed to reduce the prominence of early maladaptive schemas
Treatment As Usual
TAU in Portuguese prisons is primarily aimed to increase educational and professional qualifications
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
2. remaining in prison for at least 24 months (taking into account GPS's 12-month length and 12-month follow-up assessment), since the beginning of the program.
Exclusion Criteria
2. psychotic symptoms (the experiential exercises used in the program are contraindicated for psychotic patients)
3. being treated for drug abuse/dependence (cessation or at least substantial reduction of drug or alcohol use must precede GPS treatment)
4. being sentenced exclusively for sexual offenses (sex offenders would benefit from more specific intervention programs)
NOTE: Female offenders were also excluded from the sample because women represent less than 6% of the total inmates in Portugal, and any possible idiosyncrasies from this cohort would be underrepresented.
18 Years
40 Years
MALE
Yes
Sponsors
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University of Coimbra
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Nelio Brazao
MSc
References
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Gibbon S, Khalifa NR, Cheung NH, Vollm BA, McCarthy L. Psychological interventions for antisocial personality disorder. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2020 Sep 3;9(9):CD007668. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD007668.pub3.
Brazao N, Rijo D, Salvador MDC, Pinto-Gouveia J. The effects of the growing pro-social program on cognitive distortions and early maladaptive schemas over time in male prison inmates: A randomized controlled trial. J Consult Clin Psychol. 2017 Nov;85(11):1064-1079. doi: 10.1037/ccp0000247.
Brazao N, Rijo D, Salvador MDC, Pinto-Gouveia J. Promoting emotion and behavior regulation in male prison inmates: A secondary data analysis from a randomized controlled trial testing the efficacy of the growing pro-social program. Law Hum Behav. 2018 Feb;42(1):57-70. doi: 10.1037/lhb0000267. Epub 2017 Oct 26.
Other Identifiers
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SFRH/BD/89283/2012
Identifier Type: OTHER_GRANT
Identifier Source: secondary_id
CINEICC-1-NB
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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