Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2896882945> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 60 of
60
with 100 items per page.
- W2896882945 endingPage "168" @default.
- W2896882945 startingPage "162" @default.
- W2896882945 abstract "L’ensemble des travaux qui a étudié les rapports entre paranoïa et délinquance porte exclusivement sur les sujets souffrant d’un trouble délirant paranoïaque. Pourtant, la personnalité paranoïaque est considérée comme à risques de violences, et la rencontre de ces sujets n’est pas rare lorsqu’il s’agit d’expertiser des auteurs d’infractions de diverses natures. Il n’existe, cependant, aucune étude décrivant précisément les infractions pouvant être commises par ces sujets. À partir d’une expérience expertale de 17 années, nous avons sélectionné tous les sujets présentant un trouble de personnalité paranoïaque. Ceux-ci ont été répartis en deux groupes, selon qu’ils présentaient un trouble de personnalité paranoïaque isolé ou qu’il était associé à un trouble délirant paranoïaque. Le but de notre étude était de décrire les différents types d’infractions commises par les sujets souffrants d’un trouble de la personnalité paranoïaque isolé et de les comparer avec les infractions commises par les délirants paranoïaques. Notre hypothèse initiale était que les deux populations présentaient un profil criminologique comparable. Les différentes infractions ont été regroupées en grandes catégories d’infractions justifiant l’expertise. Notre échantillon comportait 106 personnes dont 79 présentaient un trouble de personnalité paranoïaque isolé et 27 une personnalité paranoïaque associée à un trouble délirant paranoïaque. Les comparaisons des deux groupes ont fait apparaître des différences significatives en termes de type de passages à l’acte. Nous avons observé que les délirants paranoïaques commettaient, comme il est décrit dans la littérature, des infractions de logique assez stéréotypée, du registre de la violence verbale ou physique, allant possiblement jusqu’à l’homicide. Les infractions sexuelles étaient rares. En revanche, chez les auteurs présentant un trouble de personnalité paranoïaque on constatait un plus grand polymorphisme des passages à l’acte incluant des faits de violence non sexuelle et des faits de violence sexuelle. Cette étude démontre que les personnalités paranoïaques et les délirants paranoïaques sont à risque d’infraction différente et nous amène à mieux prendre en compte le risque criminologique pouvant être associé au trouble de la personnalité paranoïaque, et ce, en dehors de toute décompensation délirante. Currently, all of the studies that focus on the relationship between paranoia and criminal offenses exclusively concern subjects suffering from a delusional paranoid disorder. However, subjects with single paranoid personality disorder, without any associated delusional disorder, are not uncommon in forensic practice. This study aims to describe the offenses committed by subjects suffering from a single paranoid personality disorder and to compare them with the offenses committed by the subjects affected by a paranoid delusional disorder associated with paranoid personality disorder. Our initial hypothesis is that both populations have a comparable criminological profile. Based on a 17 year-long experience carried out in the framework of a forensic assessment, we have selected all subjects presenting a paranoid personality disorder, whether single or associated with paranoid delusional disorder. The selected individuals were divided into two groups according to whether they presented paranoid delusional disorder or not. The offenses were grouped into criminal categories. The alpha risk was fixed at 1%. Data analysis is done by SAS software version 9.4. In a sample of 106 subjects presenting a paranoid personality disorder, including 4 women and 102 men, we found 79 subjects with a single paranoid personality and 27 with an associated paranoid delusional disorder. The average age at the time of the offense was 41 for those with single personality disorders and 49 for those with paranoid delusional disorders. Both groups had forensic antecedents (41%, 11/27 of paranoid delusional disorder and 51%, 40/79 of single paranoid personality disorder). Psychiatric history was more frequent in the paranoid delusional disorder group (59%, 16/27) than in the single paranoid personality disorder group (13%, 10/79). History of addiction was comparable in terms of alcohol abuse (26% in both groups) and other substances (7.5%, 2/27 of paranoid delusional disorder and 9%, 7/79 of single paranoid personality disorder). Comparison of the two groups highlighted significant differences in the type of criminal offenses committed (Fisher's exact test: P = 0.0003, alpha risk < 0.0001). The offenses committed by delusional authors essentially came down to verbal or physical violence, including homicide (44%, 12/27), and were usually focused on a designated persecutor. Sexual violence was rare. On the other hand, paranoid personality disorder was associated with a wider variety of offenses. Sexual offenses (including 28 rapes, 35%, 28/79) were thus almost as frequent as murder, and attempted murder (38%, 30/79). This diversity of committed offenses was found in their forensic antecedents. In these subjects, the logic of omnipotence may had over ruled the logic of revenge. We conducted a retrospective study on 106 subjects with paranoid personality disorder, including 27 subjects with associated paranoid delusional disorder. The comparison of the two groups demonstrated significant differences in offenses. Verbal and physical but non-sexual violence, committed in a delusional logic, was found among delusional subjects, while the forms of violence were more multiform in the single paranoid personality disorder group, frequently including sexual violence. This is, as far as we know, the first study describing the medico-legal acting-out of paranoid personalities. These results, which will need to be confirmed by future studies, point out the importance of the criminological risk that may be associated with paranoid personality disorder, without any associated delusional disorder." @default.
- W2896882945 created "2018-10-26" @default.
- W2896882945 creator A5009718854 @default.
- W2896882945 creator A5050325780 @default.
- W2896882945 date "2019-04-01" @default.
- W2896882945 modified "2023-09-27" @default.
- W2896882945 title "Trouble de personnalité paranoïaque et infractions pénales" @default.
- W2896882945 cites W2045529323 @default.
- W2896882945 cites W2052193459 @default.
- W2896882945 cites W2052614641 @default.
- W2896882945 cites W2073141569 @default.
- W2896882945 cites W2102323052 @default.
- W2896882945 cites W2114748765 @default.
- W2896882945 cites W2140110729 @default.
- W2896882945 cites W2150913981 @default.
- W2896882945 cites W2158472438 @default.
- W2896882945 cites W2158794213 @default.
- W2896882945 cites W2159957245 @default.
- W2896882945 cites W2169342376 @default.
- W2896882945 cites W8215199 @default.
- W2896882945 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/j.encep.2018.07.005" @default.
- W2896882945 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/30309614" @default.
- W2896882945 hasPublicationYear "2019" @default.
- W2896882945 type Work @default.
- W2896882945 sameAs 2896882945 @default.
- W2896882945 citedByCount "4" @default.
- W2896882945 countsByYear W28968829452019 @default.
- W2896882945 countsByYear W28968829452021 @default.
- W2896882945 countsByYear W28968829452023 @default.
- W2896882945 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2896882945 hasAuthorship W2896882945A5009718854 @default.
- W2896882945 hasAuthorship W2896882945A5050325780 @default.
- W2896882945 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W2896882945 hasConcept C15708023 @default.
- W2896882945 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W2896882945 hasConceptScore W2896882945C138885662 @default.
- W2896882945 hasConceptScore W2896882945C15708023 @default.
- W2896882945 hasConceptScore W2896882945C15744967 @default.
- W2896882945 hasIssue "2" @default.
- W2896882945 hasLocation W28968829451 @default.
- W2896882945 hasLocation W28968829452 @default.
- W2896882945 hasOpenAccess W2896882945 @default.
- W2896882945 hasPrimaryLocation W28968829451 @default.
- W2896882945 hasRelatedWork W1013667899 @default.
- W2896882945 hasRelatedWork W11365241 @default.
- W2896882945 hasRelatedWork W1589203209 @default.
- W2896882945 hasRelatedWork W1932013790 @default.
- W2896882945 hasRelatedWork W2557454913 @default.
- W2896882945 hasRelatedWork W2603296253 @default.
- W2896882945 hasRelatedWork W2748952813 @default.
- W2896882945 hasRelatedWork W2899084033 @default.
- W2896882945 hasRelatedWork W828925460 @default.
- W2896882945 hasRelatedWork W93312527 @default.
- W2896882945 hasVolume "45" @default.
- W2896882945 isParatext "false" @default.
- W2896882945 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W2896882945 magId "2896882945" @default.
- W2896882945 workType "article" @default.