I’m genuinely curious. As the overwhelming consensus is that OASYS is not fit for purpose, what would we (the practitioner) want the risk assessment framework to consist of? I guess I’m struggling to imagine an assessment methodology which would continue to facilitate holistic assessment of need, risk of harm, sentence plan objectives and controls that would be much different from OASYS. We certainly do not need a rebranded gurgitation of the same thing. Are there tools used in other sectors or by Probation services abroad which would represent an improvement?
I'm interested to know would people on here who support getting rid of OASYS and the command and control management structure and giving POs full autonomy and control over how they assess and supervise cases, expect greater scrutiny and accountability of POs for SFOs? I mean that as a genuine question, not a rhetorical question. ie would the trade off be to say that POs (with the right training and support) would get total freedom on how they go about their work but that when something goes wrong then the buck would truly stop with them?
I think most people were saying "get rid of OASYS" not get rid of any form of assessment. Think of OASYS in its most basic form: There are 13 areas of that person's life, some of which contribute to "offending", some of which contribute to their "risk of harm". If I gave you an A4 sheet of paper, asking you to identify which of those areas contribute to that person's risk and why and upon what basis, citing a range of evidence sources and drawing these together to say why you have come to your own view upon these, I hazard a guess your assessment would be a) shorter b) more effective and c) would take far less time.
To me it's just that OASYS itself asks the wrong questions, and it's focus on risk factors means the plan becomes so tightly focussed on those factors = so if the problem is drugs, the goal becomes "I will do something about drugs", if the risk factor is thinking, the goal becomes "i will address my thinking" or a variation of a theme, rather than "what is within my power right now to move me away from drugs or" or the behaviour of target.
"Ever thought how we might have managed before it came along?" There were several (at least three) risk assessment tools across England & Wales utilised by various Probation Areas, all of which were different & designed by different people of varying expertise, experience & ability.
Previous posts/replies on the blog have detailed how many, what, when, where - and that the initial idea of OASys was welcomed as a means of extracting the best from all to have a coherent single means of risk assessment. It was a Trojan Horse pushed through the gates by HM Prison Service psychologists, at the behest of the Home Office, to disrupt the fierce independence of the Probation Service. As far as I can remember none of the historical assessments were more than 3 sides A4.
Other 'modern' risk assessment tools (riding on the wave of the risk business) include those for sexual offending, for violent offending, for mental health assessments, for personality disorders, for child protection, for domestic violence, for placement of children. Some are undeniably helpful, but they are not generally utilised in a helpful way.
"imagine an assessment methodology which would continue to facilitate holistic assessment of need, risk of harm, sentence plan objectives and controls that would be much different from OASYS."
It used to be a core skill of the trained Probation Officer that they would spend time with someone over a couple of lengthy interviews and make an initial assessment that formed the basis of a narrative document called a Pre Sentence Report, which proposed a sentence to the Court. Assuming a period of supervision was imposed, from that initial assessment (the same or another) Probation Officer could develop the themes in the report during discussions over a period of time with the individual subject. Things might change post-sentence and clearer admissions might be made without the fear of imprisonment; this could take the supervision in a whole new direction.
Written records documented the process. No-one was chained to a keyboard for hours on end - the time was spent with those subject to supervision, actually interacting with and assessing the person you were working with. It was a professional role with skills, which required quality 'clinical' supervision, and required teamwork & support, required integrity and stamina and tact and many other positive traits.
Managing risk and building hope – what next for assessment?
Our priority is to reduce reoffending and protect the public. Until recently, we have focused on the risk presented by individuals but in future will need to understand more about areas of strength and factors that support people to desist from crime. Focusing on negative labelling and stigmatisation following conviction can hinder desistance. Desistance is how people with a previous pattern of offending abstain from crime. An effective risk assessment system can help us do both.
We will continue to evaluate and learn from evidence, and to develop more effective risk assessment tools, to help individuals to reduce their reoffending and to lead better lives.