Ill. Admin. Code tit. 20, § 1905.50
a) Licensed evaluators shall conduct objective, impartial and reliable sexual abuser-specific assessments that support well-informed decision making and maintain the credibility and integrity of the profession.
1) Evaluators conduct sexual abuser-specific assessments in accordance with any additional ethical standards, codes, laws or other expectations for the respective profession or discipline of practice. This includes ethical standards pertaining to, but not limited to, the following:
2) Evaluators:
3) Evaluators conducting sexual abuser-specific assessments:
5) Evaluators take reasonable steps to:
B) document those efforts in the report. These steps include, but are not limited to the following:
6) Evaluators:
b) Evaluators shall clarify with the requestor and subject the specific purposes for which an assessment is being conducted and shall document accordingly.
1) Evaluators conduct sexual abuser-specific assessments primarily for the following purposes:
2) Evaluators recognize that sexual abuser-specific assessments are not designed or reliable for, and should not be conducted for, the following purposes:
c) Evaluators shall utilize assessment measures, instruments and procedures that are appropriate for addressing the specific goals of the assessment, for the purposes for which the tools were designed, and for the client being assessed.
d) Evaluators shall recognize that conducting psychosexual evaluations provides a critical opportunity to gain comprehensive understanding of the client's circumstances, risk, intervention needs and responsivity factors; engage the client in the assessment and overall intervention process; and offer reliable data to inform decision making.
1) Evaluators rely on multiple sources of information when conducting a psychosexual evaluation, preferably to include the following:
F) When professional judgement dictates:
2) Evaluators identify, document and explain the implications of specific responsivity factors, which include, but are not limited to, the following:
7) Evaluators seek to obtain a range of general background information about the client, including, but not limited to, the following:
8) Evaluators collect information regarding sexual history information that includes, but is not limited to, the following:
9) Evaluators explore and document a client's strengths, assets and protective factors, which may include, but are not limited to, the following areas:
e) Potential Involvement of Adult Victims in the Evaluation Process
1) If a victim expresses an interest in having his or her perspectives represented by actively participating in the evaluation process of the sexual abuser, the evaluator shall adhere to certain parameters.
f) The Written Report
4) Evaluators clearly articulate conclusions and recommendations based on supporting evidence documented in the body of the report, and that generally address the following (as relevant to the purpose of the assessment):
6) Evaluators recognize that communicating the results to the subject of the evaluation may be beneficial (e.g., for clarity, to facilitate client engagement, to gauge the subject's response to feedback) and take reasonable steps, using language at a level that is accessible to the individual being assessed, to: