2nd Edition

Managing Clinical Risk A Guide to Effective Practice

Edited By Caroline Logan, Lorraine Johnstone Copyright 2024
    518 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    518 Pages 5 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    The second edition of Managing Clinical Risk is an authoritative guide on how to engage in risk assessment and management practice in evidence-based, accountable and effective ways.

    Over the course of a dozen chapters, each oriented around a brief case study reflecting a different area of risk, practitioners are offered guidance on how to read referrals, how to decide what information matters to their evaluations, how to speak to a person who may be reluctant to engage in an assessment of this kind, how to organise the information they have gathered in order to prepare a risk formulation that will in turn guide risk management, and how to communicate opinions and recommendations in ways that have an impact. The book provides an evidence-based understanding of risk assessment and management in key areas of practice – violence, sexual violence, suicidal and self-harmful behaviour, as well as family and relationship violence, organised criminal and group-based violence, and violent extremism. Practices relevant to understanding violent behaviour in individuals are contrasted with those better suited for working with groups and organisations. How practitioners can take account of the diversity of the clients with whom they work is a central consideration in every chapter. And helping practitioners develop the skills to enable them to formulate risk where there may be multiple areas of concern is a key objective of this book.

    All the contributors to this updated guide to effective practice are scholar-practitioners – experienced professionals with a track record of writing and teaching about risk assessment and management practice in their respective fields. Therefore, this book contains realistic rather than idealistic representations of the work required to prevent harmful behaviour by the kinds of clients they work with. Together, contributors combine theoretical and research knowledge with a wealth of practical skills, emphasising the collaborative and recovery-focused nature of modern risk management.

     1. A second edition of Managing Clinical Risk

    CAROLINE LOGAN & LORRAINE JOHNSTONE

     2. General practice principles in violence risk assessment and management

    CAROLINE LOGAN & JOHN TAYLOR

      3. General practice principles in sexual violence risk assessment and management

    LEAM CRAIG, MARTIN RETTENBERGER, CAROLINE LOGAN & LORRAINE JOHNSTONE

     4.  General practice principles in the risk assessment and management of self-harmful and suicidal behaviour

    CAROLINE LOGAN & LORRAINE JOHNSTONE 

      5. Autism and the assessment and management of violence risk

    DAVID MURPHY & LISA DAVIES

    6. Acquired brain injury and the assessment and management of violence risk

    SUZANNE O’ROURKE & EMMA DRYSDALE

     7. Assessing parenting capacity and risk of child maltreatment

    LORRAINE JOHNSTONE

     8. Assessing and managing the risk of intimate partner and family violence

    ANDREW NEWMAN & CERI JONES

     9. Assessing and managing risks associated with stalking

    TROY MCEWAN & ALAN UNDERWOOD

     10. Assessing and managing the risk of organised crime, human trafficking and modern slavery

    LISA DAVIES, LAURA POWLING & JODI SYMMONDS 

     11.Assessing and managing the risk of group and gang violence in young people

    BERIT RICHIE & DONNA MCEWAN

     12. Assessing and managing the risk of violent extremism

    CAROLINE LOGAN

    13. The ecology of institutional violence: Understanding and intervening

    DAVID COOKE

    14. Managing Clinical Risk: Key points and take-home messages

    CAROLINE LOGAN & LORRAINE JOHNSTONE

    Biography

    Caroline Logan is a Lead Consultant Forensic Clinical Psychologist at Greater Manchester Mental Health NHS Foundation Trust and Honorary Senior Lecturer at the University of Manchester in England.

    Lorraine Johnstone is a Consultant Clinical Forensic Psychologist and independent Practitioner, and a visiting Professor at the University of Strathclyde in Scotland.