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Readiness to Change, Partner Violence Subtypes, and Treatment Outcomes Among Men in Treatment for Partner Assault

NCJ Number
241319
Journal
Violence and Victims Volume: 23 Issue: 4 Dated: 2008 Pages: 446-475
Author(s)
Christopher Eckhardt, Ph.D.; Amy Holtzworth-Munroe, Ph.D.; Bradley Norlander, Ph.D.; Ashley Sibley, Ph.D.; Melissa Cahill, Ph.D.
Date Published
2008
Length
30 pages
Annotation

Men court-mandated to attend a batterer's intervention program (BIP) were evaluated to determine whether pre-BIP readiness to change and the presence of partner violence subtypes predicted BIP completion, criminal recidivism, and postadjudication partner violence 6 months post-BIP.

Abstract

Men court-mandated to attend a batterer's intervention program (BIP) were evaluated to determine whether pre-BIP readiness to change and the presence of partner violence subtypes predicted BIP completion, criminal recidivism, and postadjudication partner violence 6 months post-BIP. Of the 199 subject sample, 40 percent did not complete BIP. Four readiness-to-change clusters were found, with most men (76 percent) reporting change-resistant stages-of-change profiles. The partner violence typology reported by Holtzworth-Munroe et al. (2000) was supported with clustering into four subtypes: family only (FO), low-level antisocial (LLA), borderline/dysphoric (BD), and generally violent/antisocial (GVA). BIP completion was predicted by violence subtype (with BD and GVA more likely to drop out) but not by pre-BIP readiness to change. Men rearrested scored higher on the precontemplative stage of change and were more likely to be in the BD and GVA subtypes. Implications for counseling strategies are discussed. (Published Abstract)