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Police and law enforcement ‘back-office’ staff dealing with traumatic material need extra support when working from home

01.24.22 | University of Birmingham

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Analytical and intelligence professionals in back-office as supportive staff working with traumatic material during the pandemic have reported feeling anxious, sad, lonely and exhausted. Additional support is needed to help them manage working from home or commuting into work, according to new research.

A team of psychologists from the University of Birmingham carried out interviews at an early stage of the pandemic to find out how workers in these sectors had been affected – in terms of their work and their mental health – and what support they had received from employers.

The team recruited 16 volunteers from police forces throughout the UK. Five were male and 11 were female and all reported being of White ethnicity. All were working in intelligence and analytical roles.

Almost all the interviewees reported some positive effects of the pandemics, such as valuing the efforts made by employers to provide a safe working environment, and the pandemic causing fewer crimes overall to be committed.

But, alongside this, working from home with fewer job resources made working with traumatic material more challenging and time-consuming. In addition, colleagues were less able to access informal conversations with colleagues, losing out on additional expertise as well as informal social support.

“While many law-enforcement officers will have to leave home to carry out their duties, others in more analytical or research roles, may find themselves working remotely and potentially on distressing topics such as sexual violence or homicide,” said lead researcher Dr Fazeelat Duran. “For staff working from home, this means bringing such material into the home, blurring boundaries which can be important for mental well-being. It also often means additional careful management is required to ensure other family members do not come into contact with the material.”

The team recommended a number of interventions that employees could consider:

“Although we recognise the nature of the work done by these analysts/intelligence professionals, their roles put some constraints on what measures can be put in place, there clearly needs to be some consideration of how to support staff carrying out this vital work in particularly challenging circumstances,” added Dr Duran.

The study is published in Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy.

ENDS

Psychological Trauma Theory Research Practice and Policy

Data/statistical analysis

People

Impact of the current pandemic on analytical and intelligence professionals working in police and law enforcement organisations

24-Jan-2022

Keywords

Article Information

Contact Information

Beck Lockwood
University of Birmingham
r.lockwood@bham.ac.uk

How to Cite This Article

APA:
University of Birmingham. (2022, January 24). Police and law enforcement ‘back-office’ staff dealing with traumatic material need extra support when working from home. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/L7VVK6D8/police-and-law-enforcement-back-office-staff-dealing-with-traumatic-material-need-extra-support-when-working-from-home.html
MLA:
"Police and law enforcement ‘back-office’ staff dealing with traumatic material need extra support when working from home." Brightsurf News, Jan. 24 2022, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/L7VVK6D8/police-and-law-enforcement-back-office-staff-dealing-with-traumatic-material-need-extra-support-when-working-from-home.html.