Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Title

Criminal Behaviour and Mental Health

PubMed ID

33200470

Publisher

Wiley

School

School of Arts and Humanities

RAS ID

32573

Comments

This is an author's accepted manuscript of:

Parry, C. L., Preece, D. A., Allan, M. M., & Allan, A. (2021). Alexithymia in nonviolent offenders. Criminal Behaviour and Mental Health, 31(1), 44-48. https://doi.org/10.1002/cbm.2177

Abstract

Background:

Alexithymia is a trait involving difficulties processing emotions. Existing data suggest it is associated with violent offending. In violent offender programmes, therefore, violent offenders are screened for alexithymia and it is attended to if necessary. No studies have, however, examined alexithymia levels in nonviolent offenders and it is, therefore, unknown whether it is also a criminogenic factor in this population.

Aims:

To investigate alexithymia levels among incarcerated nonviolent offenders and compare them with a community comparison group.

Method:

The 20-item Toronto Alexithymia Scale was used to compare the alexithymia levels of 67 incarcerated nonviolent offenders with a group of 139 people from the general public living in the community.

Results:

Alexithymia levels did not differ between the groups. Conclusion: It appears that alexithymia is not a criminogenic factor for nonviolent offenders and screening of such offenders appears unnecessary.

DOI

10.1002/cbm.2177

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