Program Goals/Target Population
The New Jersey Adult Diagnostic Treatment Center (ADTC) is a facility that provides cognitive–behavioral treatment services aimed at reducing recidivism rates of people convicted of adult sex offenses. The program targets those in the New Jersey correctional system who are receptive to receiving treatment. The ADTC is the only facility in the state (and one of the few in the country) that provides specific treatment and incarceration for people convicted of adult sex offenses.
Program Activities
The program contains two components: 1) cognitive–behavioral treatment, which concentrates on reconstructing cognitive distortions; and 2) relapse prevention, which focuses on the recognition of patterns that lead to sex offenses and breaking those patterns to prevent recidivism.
The treatment has five sequential levels, with each building on the previous level and ending with the subject maintaining the gains he has made in treatment through the program. Within the five levels, they receive a standard set of psychoeducational modules. In the first level, patients are grouped and receive basic information about sex offending, an orientation to treatment, and begin to acquire the skills needed to participate more fully in the advanced psychotherapy. In the second level, patients begin using a sex-offender-specific workbook to apply the knowledge to their own lives, including responsibility and victim empathy.
The third level focuses on mastery of previous information, in less structured groups, and the beginning of relapse-prevention exercises. The fourth level focuses on more detailed relapse-prevention plans and release preparations. The final level maintains the progress made through the other levels and the placement in a therapeutic community within the ADTC, with additional responsibilities.