Tundra Space

Tundra Space

Clinical Research Directory

Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.

Back to Studies
ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT06854133

Factors of Effectiveness in Italian Forensic Treatment

Sponsor: University of Bari

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Over recent years, in Italy, the treatment of mentally ill offenders has undergone profound changes following successive legislative interventions, culminating in Law no. 81/2014, which closed all high-security psychiatric hospitals (OPG) and established a community-based forensic care model managed exclusively by the National Health Service. This model, centred on REMS and territorial mental health services, is unique in the Western context and emphasises rehabilitation, recovery, and time-limited custodial measures. In California, forensic treatment is regulated by the California Penal Code and delivered mainly within high-security state hospitals coordinated by the Department of State Hospitals (DSH), with long average lengths of stay and strong standardisation of security procedures. The two systems therefore differ markedly in structure, duration of stay, and balance between security and rehabilitative goals, raising questions about their respective effectiveness in terms of clinical outcomes, functional recovery, and violent recidivism. This multicentre, prospective cohort study compares Italian forensic patients (Group I) and Californian forensic patients (Group C), enrolled at first entry into forensic care and followed longitudinally for three years with assessments at T0, T1, T2, and T3 using harmonised tools (BPRS 4.0, WHODAS 2.0, HCR-20 V3, SAPROF, DUNDRUM Toolkit, MOAS) and a common data collection form. Primary aims include a detailed epidemiological characterisation of the Italian forensic population and a systematic comparison of outcomes between the Italian and Californian models with respect to violent recidivism, length of stay in forensic settings, clinical and functional improvement, and recovery indicators. Comparative analyses focus on subgroups of participants with psychotic disorders and mental disorders directly related to the index offence, in order to examine differences in outcomes attributable to systemic and organisational features of the two forensic treatment models rather than to diagnostic or criminological heterogeneity.

Official title: Longitudinal Study Comparing an Italian and a Californian Population of Mentally Ill Offenders: Identification of Forensic Treatment Effectiveness Factors

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 70 Years

Study Type

OBSERVATIONAL

Enrollment

600

Start Date

2025-02-01

Completion Date

2031-06-30

Last Updated

2026-06-04

Healthy Volunteers

No

Locations (1)

Dipartimento Interdisciplinare Di Medicina, Psichiatria Forense E Criminologia

Bari, Ba, Italy