Research
SafeCare has an ongoing interest in research into the prevention of child sexual abuse (CSA). The organisation has substantial records of over 20 years work with CSA offenders and their families.
Community-Based Treatment Programs for Child Sexual Abuse and Child Internet Pornography (CEM) Offending.
Since 2010, approximately 20 – 30 men each year have attended 20-25 week Community-based Group Treatment Programs in Fremantle and Shenton Park, Western Australia, to address the issues of child sexual offending (CSA) and child internet pornography addiction leading to Child Exploitation material (CEM) charges. Many participants have been suicidal and referred by the arresting Police Officers of the Child Abuse Unit in Western Australia. There has been a dramatic reduction in suicides in similar circumstances as a consequence. There has also been a positive response by Courts offering diversionary and community-based penalties in many instances.
However there have been problems in offering the program when prisoners apply to attend because they are unable to access in-prison treatment programs. Regular requests are received from prison by convicted men who are not able to gain entry into an in-prison treatment program in their time in prison which prevents them being granted parole and means that they are released at the end of their full terms without having accessed any treatment for offending.
This presentation will compare in-prison and community-based treatment approaches to child sexual offending and outline the course content of the 20-25 week group treatment programs which have been offered since 2010 to 180 men facing CSA and CEM charges.
This paper supports the view that without access to treatment programs, the prevention of CSA is not being addressed in prisons or in the wider community. It supports organisations/movements like StopItNow (UK &USA) and the Dunkelfeld Prevention Project in Germany which reach out in a preventive way to assist individuals at risk of offending to access help prior to offending or as soon as possible after offending.
The need for family support programs for women who are partners and family members of those who attend and a 10 week pilot program which ran in 2016 for partners of offenders will also be discussed.