Abstract
A considerable proportion of patients with personality disorder are discharged directly to the community from special (high-security) hospitals. To examine whether patients with personality disorder discharged directly to the community are more likely to be re-convicted than those transferred to psychiatric hospitals of lesser security. Re-conviction data for a five- to nine-year follow-up were collected for a four-year (1988-1991) special hospital discharge cohort of patients with personality disorder. Individuals discharged directly to the community were not significantly more likely to be re-convicted than those transferred to less secure psychiatric hospitals. However, patients discharged to the community without formal conditions of supervision were more likely to be re-convicted than those discharged to the community with conditions or those transferred to other psychiatric hospitals. Formal supervision after discharge may be more important than actual destination in influencing the likelihood of re-conviction.
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More From: The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science
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