ODARA

Résumé des items (Ne pas utiliser sans les instructions de codage)

Nom: _______________________ Dossier#: ______________________

 

Côter chaque item:

  • 1 si présent
  • 0 si non présent
  • ? si information manquante

 

 1. Antécédent de violence domestique enregistré dans un rapport de police ou inscrit au casier judiciaire
2. Antécédent de violence non domestique enregistré dans un rapport de police ou inscrit au casier judiciaire
3. Antécédent d’une peine de prison de 30j ou plus
4. Echec d’une précédente liberation conditionnelle
5. Menaces de mort ou de blesser la victime retenues dans l’agression incriminée
6. Séquestration de la victime dans l’agression incriminée
 7.Victime inquiète de futures agressions
8. Plus d’un enfant
9. Enfant biologique de la victime issu d’une union précedente
10. Antécedent de violence contre des victimes non conjugales
11. Deux indicateurs ou plus d’abus de substances
12. Agression incriminée alors que la victime était enceinte
13. Obstacles au soutien de la victime
Score brut (Somme des items côtés 1)
Score final

 

Copyright 2011 by Research Department, Waypoint Centre for Mental Health Care 500 Church Street, Penetanguishene ON L9M 1G3 (705) 549-3181 ext. 2610

 

The Ontario Domestic Assault Risk Assessment (ODARA; Hilton et al., 2004) is a cross-validated actuarial assessment designed to estimate the risk of spousal/partner assault recidivism (see Appendix A). It is comprised of both static and dynamic risk factors. Additionally, the ODARA was developed for use by police officers in order to improve accuracy of risk assessment and overall collaboration among criminal justice and other agencies responding to wife/partner assault. Although the ODARA was designed for the for the criminal justice system (probation/parole officers, correctional officers, police officers, community service providers) other professionals besides the “frontline,” such as forensic clinicians, can employ this measure in order to assess IPV.

User qualifications require mininal training for ODARA scorers/interpretators. The authors of the ODARA have provided training sessions as well as constructed a procedural manual in order to offer the necessary education training necessary to be a competent user of the ODARA. The ODARA is comprised of 13 yes-or-no items evaluating such areas as the perpetrator’s history of prior domestic assaults, non-domestic assaults, substance abuse history, having a custodial sentence of 30 days or more, having more than one offspring, and so forth. This information is gathered from official criminal records.

Each of the 13 items is scored as a 1 (for present), or 0 (for not present), or a ? (missing information) and the scores summed together account for the overall total prediction score, ranging from 0-13. Scores of 0 indicate the lowest risk or recidivism and scores of 7-13 represent the highest risk category. The ODARA’s Running head: THE ONTARIO DOMESTIC ASSAULT RISK ASSESSMENT 15 predictive effect size in the standardization sample was .77 (ROC area) and Cohen’s d = 1.1 in the construction of this measure and .72 in cross-validation on 100 new subjects (Hilton et al., 2004). Concerning inter-rater reliability, scores yielded a standard error of measurement of .48 between the research assistants group and the police officers group (with minimal training) (Hilton et al., 2004). The maximum number of missing items for scoring a valid ODARA is five, if five or more items are missing from the ODARA, it cannot be scored (Hilton, Harris, & Rice, 2010). The internal consistency of the ODARA within the current sample was moderate, Chronbach’s alpha = .66.

 

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