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Journal Article

Citation

Carleton RN, Afifi TO, Taillieu T, Turner S, Mason JE, Ricciardelli R, McCreary DR, Vaughan AD, Anderson GS, Krakauer RL, Donnelly EA, Camp RD, Groll D, Cramm HA, MacPhee RS, Griffiths CT. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020; 17(4): e1234.

Affiliation

School of Criminology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC V5A 1S6, Canada.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, MDPI: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute)

DOI

10.3390/ijerph17041234

PMID

32075062

Abstract

Public Safety Personnel (PSP; e.g., correctional workers and officers, firefighters, paramedics, police officers, and public safety communications officials (e.g., call center operators/dispatchers)) are regularly exposed to potentially psychologically traumatic events (PPTEs). PSP also experience other occupational stressors, including organizational (e.g., staff shortages, inconsistent leadership styles) and operational elements (e.g., shift work, public scrutiny). The current research quantified occupational stressors across PSP categories and assessed for relationships with PPTEs and mental health disorders (e.g., anxiety, depression). The participants were 4820 PSP (31.7% women) responding to established self-report measures for PPTEs, occupational stressors, and mental disorder symptoms. PPTEs and occupational stressors were associated with mental health disorder symptoms (ps < 0.001). PSP reported substantial difficulties with occupational stressors associated with mental health disorder symptoms, even after accounting for diverse PPTE exposures. PPTEs may be inevitable for PSP and are related to mental health; however, leadership style, organizational engagement, stigma, sleep, and social environment are modifiable variables that appear significantly related to mental health.


Language: en

Keywords

mental health disorders; occupational stress; operational stress; organizational stress; potentially psychologically traumatic events; public safety personnel

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