Centro de Documentação da PJ
Analítico de Periódico

CD 335
ANGEHRN, Andréanne, e outros
Resilience among police officers [Recurso eletrónico] : the role of personality functioning and protective factors / Andréanne Angehrn, Colette Jourdan-Ionescu, Dominick Gamache
Policing: An International Journal, Vol. 46, n. 3 (2023), p. 567-582
Ficheiro de 165 KB em formato PDF.


POLÍCIA, PSICOLOGIA DO TRABALHO, STRESS POLICIAL, SAÚDE MENTAL, ESTUDO DE CASOS

Purpose – Police officers face a unique and challenging occupational experience and report elevated mental disorder symptoms relative to the general population. While gender differences appear to be present in police mental health, this study aims to find which factors foster and promote resilience in these workers and how gender may relate to police resilience. Design/methodology/approach – The present study was designed to explore how protective factors, sexual harassment and personality dysfunction impacted resilience among police officers (n 5 380; 44% women). Furthermore, gender differences were also examined on these factors as well as on resilience rate. Findings – Men and women police officers did not differ significantly in terms of resilience, protective factors and overall experiences of sexual harassment behaviors; yet, policewomen subjectively reported having experienced more sexual harassment in the past 12 months than policemen. Men reported greater personality difficulties than women, according to the alternative Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-5) model for personality disorders. Personality dysfunction was the most robust predictor of poor resilience (ß 5 =0.465; p < 0.001). Originality/value – Personality fragilities appear to have an important negative impact on the resilience of police officers, over and above protective factors and gendered experiences. Interventions targeting emotion regulation, self-appraisal and self-reflection could help promote resilience and foster well-being in this population.