Can Psychopaths Be Rehabilitated?

No Successful Treatment for Antisocial Personality Disorder

9 Comments
Join the Conversation
Can psychopaths be rehabilitated? - genocide3wk photobucket
Can psychopaths be rehabilitated? - genocide3wk photobucket
Most psychopaths are not found in prisons, but roam free and undetected among us. For those who have been incarcerated for serious crimes, is recidivism inevitable?

Only a minority of diagnosable psychopaths are violent offenders. Most are subcriminal; manipulating, deceiving, and swindling the unsuspecting. But for psychopaths who have been snagged by the justice system, can this brand of offender be rehabilitated?

Can Psychopathy Be Reliably Diagnosed?

According to the DSM-IV-TR, the premier diagnostic manual of mental illness, Antisocial Personality, or Psychopathy, is a specific form of psychological personality disorder marked by lack of empathy, difficulty controlling impulses, and manipulative behaviors. Psychopaths can be charming, and are adept at focusing their cold, calculating efforts solely on self-gratification, typically at the expense of others. In order to determine if psychopaths are doomed to a continuing pattern of recidivism, it is necessary to have a way of reliably identifying the criminal psychopath and differentiating him from other violent offenders.

Dr. Robert Hare, a leading expert in psychopathy, and author of the book Without Conscience: The Disturbing World of Psychopaths Among Us, has spent much of his professional life developing a clinical checklist for assessing psychopathy; one that does not rely solely on the criminal’s own testimony of being rehabilitated. Hare’s tool, The Psychopathy Checklist, is now widely used by mental health professionals, and has proven to be very consistent and accurate in diagnosing psychopathy.

Can Psychopaths Be Rehabilitated?

What a person has done in the past is generally a good predictor of what he will do in the future, and therefore, it’s reasonable to assume that people with a history of criminal behavior are more dangerous that those without. But do psychopaths differ from other violent criminals in their likelihood to reoffend?

Psychopaths Aren’t your Average Criminal

Although criminals obviously don’t value or honor all of society's rule and norms, most have some rules, or type of internal code that they adhere to. Criminal behavior does not necessitate a complete lack of conscience.

Psychopaths have a specific emotional deficit, and are limited to a very narrow range of emotions. They know the difference between what society considers “right” and “wrong,” but do not experience, and cannot empathize with, the feelings of suffering, remorse, elation and love that are part of being human. Without that “little internal voice” we call conscience, psychopaths feel free to do whatever their needs and wants dictate, and their transgressions do not result in feelings of guilt (Hare 1999, Millon1998).

Not only do psychopaths lack emotions of conscience and empathy, but research has shown that individuals with Antisocial Personality Disorder (APD) are also indifferent to the threat of physical pain and to punishment in general. Without fear of punishment, there is little to deter the psychopath from committing criminal acts, if those acts represent the fastest route to gratification (Hare 1999).

Recidivism of Psychopaths

On average, about 20% of prison inmates are psychopaths, and psychopaths are responsible for more than 50% of violent crime. Studies examining the recidivism rate of federal offenders have revealed that reoffense occurs twice as often in the case of criminal psychopaths, and their violent recidivism rate is approximately triple that of other offenders.

There have been numerous, intensive programs designed to rehabilitate incarcerated psychopaths, and according to Dr. Hare, no program has yet proven to be effective. He notes that, in many cases, therapy can even help psychopaths hone their manipulative skills. His recommendation -- we all should educate ourselves about psychopaths in order to better recognize and avoid these predators (Black 1999, Hare 1999).

More Information on Psychopathy

Additional resourses on psychopathy and personality disorders in general include: Psychology Prof Online, The Mayo Clinic: Mental Health Center and the article Personality Disorders: Brief Summary of the Ten Disorders of Personality.

This Suite 101 article summarizes information on APD and psychopathy. The contents of this article are not meant to be used for diagnosis and are not a substitute for professional help and counseling.

Additional APD Resources

Black, D. (1999) Bad Boys, Bad Men: Confronting Anisocial Personality Disorder. Oxford University Press.

Hare, R. D. (1999) Without Conscience: The Disturbing World of the Psychopaths among Us. Guiford Press.

Hare, R. D. (1985) Comparison of procedures for the assessment of psychopathy. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology. 53, 7.

Millon, T. et al. (1998) Psychopathy: Antisocial, Criminal and Violent Behavior. Guiford Press.

American Psychiatric Association APA (2000) Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV-TR)

Tami Port, MS, Tami Port

Tami Port - Tami Port is a college professor of cell and microbiology and creator of ScienceProfOnline.com, a free science education website.

rss
Advertisement
Leave a comment

NOTE: Because you are not a Suite101 member, your comment will be moderated before it is viewable.
Submit
What is 5+1?

Comments

Sep 30, 2009 4:22 PM
Guest :
Psychopathology and APD are TWO DIFFERENT THINGS!!!!!
Jan 1, 2010 2:54 AM
Guest :
I think itr's good that there are people actually researching scientific causes of criminal behavior rather than just using emotive words like "evil" and "sicko". after all before psychiatry insane people were "possessed by the Devil".
Feb 3, 2010 2:43 PM
Guest :
Well, it doesn't seem too far of a stretch to call a conscienceless manipulator, a human that preys on humans, "evil".

Most obvious and most used (maybe overused) example: Hitler.
Feb 20, 2010 10:13 AM
Guest :
Pretty good article, but how do you deal with one as a parent, child or spouse...that's the article that seems to be needed most.
Apr 11, 2010 6:22 PM
Guest :
Hitler wasn't a psychopath, he feared the consequences of the Russians enough to kill himself, and was compassionate enough to kill his family and friends so the Russians didn't torture them either.

I am not saying I agree with what Hitler did, I am just saying that I do not believe he was a psychopath.
May 7, 2010 7:46 PM
Guest :
Inaccurate. ASPD is not interchangeable with psychopathy - the DSM has come under a lot of pressure to correct their ASPD category. An individual diagnosed with ASPD will not automatically meet the diagnostic criteria for psychopathy, approx 50-80% of prisoners meet the criteria for ASPD, however approx 15-30% of these individuals will meet the additional criteria of psychopathy.
May 29, 2010 10:17 AM
Guest :
hitler was 100% a psychopath, he was just a psychopath who had to have to last word. he killed himself because he wanted to be in control of what happened to him and his family, not because he was compassionate.
Dec 2, 2010 6:40 PM
Guest :
I agree with the other posters who are stating that this article is quite incorrect. Antisocial and psychopathy are different diagnoses. Antisocial personalities can feel varying degrees of empathy, and criminal behavior is central to their diagnosis. Psychopaths do not feel empathy but do not have to have committed a single crime to be diagnosed.

This article should be removed or heavily edited.
Mar 1, 2012 12:32 AM
Guest :
Hitler was NOT a psychopath, that word has become so trendy today that people generically sprinkle it on every "evil" leader. the comments said that killing his family out of compassion (or not) proved that he was/wasnt a psychopath. a psychopath wouldnt give a SHIT about family when his life is in danger, hitler would have vanished the second he even though the russians were closing in. hitler was very much human in the sense we all know it, which is what makes everything even MORE HORRIFYING. everyone of us has the potential to be hitler, he wasnt just some sick, mentally fucked up person, he was a human, with thoughts, feelings, and beliefs. whether we agree with them or not doesnt change that, and obviously what he did was disgusting. a psychopath doesnt create anything (nazi party, centralized state, social programs) they meerly leech off existing living life forms like a true parasite
9 Comments
Advertisement

Related Topics

Advertisement