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Early intervention in youth justice: reflections on a 12-month triage pilot

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Published

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Early intervention in youth justice: reflections on a 12-month triage pilot. / Harper, Ben.
2012. Paper presented at British psychological society, faculty for children and young people, Manchester, United Kingdom.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Harvard

Harper, B 2012, 'Early intervention in youth justice: reflections on a 12-month triage pilot', Paper presented at British psychological society, faculty for children and young people, Manchester, United Kingdom, 26/09/12 - 27/09/12.

APA

Harper, B. (2012). Early intervention in youth justice: reflections on a 12-month triage pilot. Paper presented at British psychological society, faculty for children and young people, Manchester, United Kingdom.

Vancouver

Harper B. Early intervention in youth justice: reflections on a 12-month triage pilot. 2012. Paper presented at British psychological society, faculty for children and young people, Manchester, United Kingdom.

Author

Harper, Ben. / Early intervention in youth justice : reflections on a 12-month triage pilot. Paper presented at British psychological society, faculty for children and young people, Manchester, United Kingdom.

Bibtex

@conference{dfa88ceea6334242b6d04c58d1956dac,
title = "Early intervention in youth justice: reflections on a 12-month triage pilot",
abstract = "Triage has been introduced as a national project in England and Wales as an initiative to prevent young people entering the youth justice system. The service is offered to young people and their families aged 10 to 17 who commit first time offences and provides a rapid early intervention assessment. The current study explores the model offered in Sefton which involves clinical psychology input alongside prevention and substance misuse workers. Exploration of the offending analysis reports for the 186 young people who attended triage over a pilot period indicates that triage led to a reduction in re-offending rates and an increase in access to appropriate diversion services, for example, youth services. Focus groups were completed with young people and their families to explore the experience of triage and the factors identified in reduced re-offending. The results indicated that early access to support services and screening for substance misuse issues were identified as factors in the reduction of re-offending. Recommendations are provided on how clinical psychologists can influence these systems through training and consultancy. ",
author = "Ben Harper",
year = "2012",
month = sep,
day = "27",
language = "English",
note = "British psychological society, faculty for children and young people ; Conference date: 26-09-2012 Through 27-09-2012",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Early intervention in youth justice

T2 - British psychological society, faculty for children and young people

AU - Harper, Ben

PY - 2012/9/27

Y1 - 2012/9/27

N2 - Triage has been introduced as a national project in England and Wales as an initiative to prevent young people entering the youth justice system. The service is offered to young people and their families aged 10 to 17 who commit first time offences and provides a rapid early intervention assessment. The current study explores the model offered in Sefton which involves clinical psychology input alongside prevention and substance misuse workers. Exploration of the offending analysis reports for the 186 young people who attended triage over a pilot period indicates that triage led to a reduction in re-offending rates and an increase in access to appropriate diversion services, for example, youth services. Focus groups were completed with young people and their families to explore the experience of triage and the factors identified in reduced re-offending. The results indicated that early access to support services and screening for substance misuse issues were identified as factors in the reduction of re-offending. Recommendations are provided on how clinical psychologists can influence these systems through training and consultancy.

AB - Triage has been introduced as a national project in England and Wales as an initiative to prevent young people entering the youth justice system. The service is offered to young people and their families aged 10 to 17 who commit first time offences and provides a rapid early intervention assessment. The current study explores the model offered in Sefton which involves clinical psychology input alongside prevention and substance misuse workers. Exploration of the offending analysis reports for the 186 young people who attended triage over a pilot period indicates that triage led to a reduction in re-offending rates and an increase in access to appropriate diversion services, for example, youth services. Focus groups were completed with young people and their families to explore the experience of triage and the factors identified in reduced re-offending. The results indicated that early access to support services and screening for substance misuse issues were identified as factors in the reduction of re-offending. Recommendations are provided on how clinical psychologists can influence these systems through training and consultancy.

M3 - Conference paper

Y2 - 26 September 2012 through 27 September 2012

ER -