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The Short Dynamic Risk Scale (SDRS) vs START: does either have a relationship with recordings of risk?

Rebecca Brewer (Learning Disability Pathway, St Andrew’s Healthcare, Northampton, UK)
Lucy Pomroy (Adolescent Pathway, St Andrew’s Healthcare, Northampton, UK)
Michelle Wells (Adolescent Pathway, St Andrew’s Healthcare, Northampton, UK)
Joanne Ratcliffe (Adolescent Pathway, St Andrew’s Healthcare, Northampton, UK)

Journal of Intellectual Disabilities and Offending Behaviour

ISSN: 2050-8824

Article publication date: 12 December 2016

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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to provide wider research evidence for the use of the Short Dynamic Risk Scale (SDRS) in risk management with individuals who have an Intellectual Disability (ID) and reside in a secure psychiatric inpatient setting. The outcomes are supportive of previous research, showing that outcomes on the SDRS are related to maladaptive behaviours recorded for individual with ID.

Design/methodology/approach

All participant data taken from the hospital healthcare reporting system were entered into a PASW database. The ratings for each of the SDRS and Short-Term Assessment of Risk and Treatability (START) items were entered and totalled, with a separate total score for the SDRS with the additional three items. In order to capture the behavioural monitoring data, average severities weightings of each of the Overt Aggression Scale-modified for neuro-rehabilitation (OAS-MNR) categories for the three weeks following completion of the individual’s SDRS were calculated and recorded. In addition, average severity weightings reflecting the presence of sexualised behaviour (St Andrew’s Sexual Behaviour Assessment (SASBA) in the subsequent three weeks following SDRS completion was included. Using the most recent START assessment completed allowed for analysis of the predictive ability of the START of the same behavioural data.

Findings

A series of Spearman’s correlations were run to determine the relationship between outcomes on the SDRS and engagement in risk behaviours as rated by the OAS-MNR scales. There was a moderate positive correlation between all 11-items of the SDRS and OAS-MNR recordings. A series of Spearman’s correlations were conducted to determine the relationship between outcomes on the START Vulnerability items and engagement in risk behaviours as rated by the OAS-MNR scales. There was a weak negative correlation between all individual START vulnerability item ratings and OAS-MNR recordings.

Research limitations/implications

The current pilot study provides wider research evidence for the use of the SDRS in risk management with individuals who have an ID and reside in a secure psychiatric inpatient setting.

Originality/value

This paper compares outcomes on the START and SDRS in relation to an individual’s risk recordings to support identification of whether either have practical and clinical utility. To the authors’ knowledge, this has not been completed before.

Keywords

Citation

Brewer, R., Pomroy, L., Wells, M. and Ratcliffe, J. (2016), "The Short Dynamic Risk Scale (SDRS) vs START: does either have a relationship with recordings of risk?", Journal of Intellectual Disabilities and Offending Behaviour, Vol. 7 No. 4, pp. 202-212. https://doi.org/10.1108/JIDOB-05-2016-0006

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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