Ill. Admin. Code tit. 20, § 1905.90 - Treatment Guidelines
a) Licensed
treatment providers shall utilize sexual abuser-specific treatment that is
guided by ethical principles and current empirical research in order to
maximize treatment effectiveness, promote public safety, facilitate prosocial
goals for clients, and maintain the integrity of the profession.
1) Treatment providers utilize sexual
abuser-specific treatment in accordance with any additional ethical standards,
codes, laws or other expectations for the respective profession or discipline
of practice. This includes ethical standards pertaining to, but not limited to,
the following:
A) Informed consent;
B) Specialized training, knowledge, expertise
and scope of practice;
C)
Documentation and retention of records;
D) Currency of research;
E) Confidentiality;
F) Professional relationships; and
G) Conduct.
2) Treatment providers appreciate that
treatment for individuals who have sexually abused or are at risk for sexually
abusing others is an evolving science.
3) Treatment providers remain apprised of
contemporary research and engage in professional development activities to
ground their provision of research-supported and evidence-based interventions
for sexual abusers accordingly.
4)
Treatment providers encourage, support and, whenever possible, participate in
ongoing empirical research efforts designed to identify and refine effective
interventions for sexual abusers and those at risk to sexually abuse
others.
5) Treatment providers
working with sexual abusers collaborate with other professionals who are
involved in the management of clients, including judges, probation/parole
officers, correctional and other facility staff, child welfare workers, and
victim therapists in order to facilitate information sharing and further the
goals of treatment. This collaboration/cooperation is consistent with and
limited to activities and behavior appropriate to treatment providers'
professional roles.
6) Treatment
providers recognize that correctional staff and community supervision
practitioners who are well-trained and skilled in using evidence-based
behavioral techniques and interventions (e.g., prosocial modeling, skill
practice, rehearsal of strategies, redirection, positive reinforcement) can
complement treatment activities in correctional and other facilities and
post-release.
b)
Assessment-Driven Treatment
Treatment providers shall recognize the importance of individualized, assessment-driven treatment services and deliver treatment accordingly.
1) Treatment providers
ensure that, prior to initiating treatment services for individuals who have
sexually abused or are at risk of sexually abusing others, a psychosexual
evaluation of a client's recidivism risk and intervention needs has been
conducted, is current and is comprehensive.
2) Treatment providers rely on
research-supported assessment methods that are designed to identify dynamic
risk factors present for a given client.
3) Treatment providers develop and implement
an individualized, written treatment plan for each client, outlining clear and
specific treatment goals and objectives that are consistent with the results of
a current psychosexual evaluation.
4) Treatment providers routinely review and
update treatment plans based on multiple methods of assessment.
5) Treatment providers offer treatment that
is appropriate for a client's assessed level of risk and intervention
needs.
6) Treatment providers offer
treatment only when they have the resources necessary to provide an adequate
and appropriate level of intervention for a client's risk and needs.
7) Treatment providers refer a potential
client to other treatment providers or agencies when they cannot provide an
adequate and appropriate level of intervention. This may involve a full
transfer or sharing of clinical responsibility.
8) Treatment providers recognize the
importance of primary and secondary prevention by making treatment services
available to, or making appropriate referrals for, individuals who may be at
risk for engaging in sexually abusive behaviors and are seeking nonmandated
assistance.
9) Treatment providers
recognize that some individuals may present for sexual abuser treatment in the
absence of legal or other mandates and that appropriate services should be made
accessible to those individuals.
Notes
State regulations are updated quarterly; we currently have two versions available. Below is a comparison between our most recent version and the prior quarterly release. More comparison features will be added as we have more versions to compare.
No prior version found.