Omega-3 and vitamin D supplementation to reduce recidivism: a pilot study
Objectives: While three randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have been conducted using omega-3 supplementation on prison populations, none have examined effects on recidivism. This study presents pilot findings on recidivism rates following omega-3 and vitamin D supplementation. Methods: Young offend...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1689842023-06-26T04:29:30Z Omega-3 and vitamin D supplementation to reduce recidivism: a pilot study Raine, Adrian Choy, Olivia Leung, Chi-Ching Singh, Melvinder Kaur, Jasmin School of Social Sciences Social sciences::Psychology Recidivism Nutrition Objectives: While three randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have been conducted using omega-3 supplementation on prison populations, none have examined effects on recidivism. This study presents pilot findings on recidivism rates following omega-3 and vitamin D supplementation. Methods: Young offenders (N = 145) were randomized into 3 groups: omega-3/vitamin D supplementation (N = 48), placebo (N = 46), and treatment-as-usual controls (N = 51). One-, two-, and three-year recidivism rates were calculated. Results: The omega-3 group showed non-significantly reduced recidivism rates compared to both control groups in all three years. Three-year recidivism reduction effect sizes were as follows: omega-3 versus controls (d =.18) and omega-3 versus placebo (d =.17). Conclusions: A future study with a sample size of 237 would have a power of.80 to detect these effect sizes. These pilot data suggest that omega-3 and vitamin D supplementation, a simple and relatively cheap health intervention, could reduce 3-year recidivism by 16.6%. 2023-06-26T04:29:30Z 2023-06-26T04:29:30Z 2023 Journal Article Raine, A., Choy, O., Leung, C., Singh, M. & Kaur, J. (2023). Omega-3 and vitamin D supplementation to reduce recidivism: a pilot study. Journal of Experimental Criminology. https://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11292-023-09552-2 1573-3750 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168984 10.1007/s11292-023-09552-2 2-s2.0-85146924516 en Journal of Experimental Criminology © The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V. 2023. |
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Social sciences::Psychology Recidivism Nutrition Raine, Adrian Choy, Olivia Leung, Chi-Ching Singh, Melvinder Kaur, Jasmin Omega-3 and vitamin D supplementation to reduce recidivism: a pilot study |
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Objectives: While three randomized controlled trials (RCTs) have been conducted using omega-3 supplementation on prison populations, none have examined effects on recidivism. This study presents pilot findings on recidivism rates following omega-3 and vitamin D supplementation. Methods: Young offenders (N = 145) were randomized into 3 groups: omega-3/vitamin D supplementation (N = 48), placebo (N = 46), and treatment-as-usual controls (N = 51). One-, two-, and three-year recidivism rates were calculated. Results: The omega-3 group showed non-significantly reduced recidivism rates compared to both control groups in all three years. Three-year recidivism reduction effect sizes were as follows: omega-3 versus controls (d =.18) and omega-3 versus placebo (d =.17). Conclusions: A future study with a sample size of 237 would have a power of.80 to detect these effect sizes. These pilot data suggest that omega-3 and vitamin D supplementation, a simple and relatively cheap health intervention, could reduce 3-year recidivism by 16.6%. |
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School of Social Sciences |
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School of Social Sciences Raine, Adrian Choy, Olivia Leung, Chi-Ching Singh, Melvinder Kaur, Jasmin |
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Article |
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Raine, Adrian Choy, Olivia Leung, Chi-Ching Singh, Melvinder Kaur, Jasmin |
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Raine, Adrian |
title |
Omega-3 and vitamin D supplementation to reduce recidivism: a pilot study |
title_short |
Omega-3 and vitamin D supplementation to reduce recidivism: a pilot study |
title_full |
Omega-3 and vitamin D supplementation to reduce recidivism: a pilot study |
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Omega-3 and vitamin D supplementation to reduce recidivism: a pilot study |
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Omega-3 and vitamin D supplementation to reduce recidivism: a pilot study |
title_sort |
omega-3 and vitamin d supplementation to reduce recidivism: a pilot study |
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2023 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/168984 |
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1772826902318284800 |