How we can protect the protectors: Learning from police officers and staff involved in child sexual abuse and exploitation investigations
How we can protect the protectors: Learning from police officers and staff involved in child sexual abuse and exploitation investigations
Background: Police officers and staff who work in child sexual abuse and exploitation (CSAE) investigations are routinely exposed to traumatic materials and situations. Despite support services, working in this space can have negative impacts on wellbeing. This paper explores the experiences and perceptions held by police officers and staff involved in CSAE investigations in the United Kingdom, regarding work-related wellbeing support and barriers to accessing such support.
Method: A sample of 661 serving police officers and staff working in CSAE investigations participated in a United Kingdom-wide ‘Protecting the Protectors’ survey. We analysed quantitative and qualitative responses relating to participants’ experiences and perceptions regarding three main areas: (1) availability, usage and helpfulness of existing work-based well-being support; (2) barriers to accessing support; and (3) desired support services.
Findings: Five interconnected themes emerged from the qualitative data that represented participants’ experiences and views of work-based wellbeing support and the barriers to accessing it. These were ‘Lack of trust’, ‘Stigma’, ‘Organisational approaches to wellbeing’, ‘Support services’, and ‘Internalised barriers’. The findings suggest that whilst respondents were aware of work-based support, they indicated most frequently that they ‘never or almost never’ used them. Respondents also identified barriers to accessing support, which related to a perception of a critical or judgmental workplace culture and indicating a lack of trust in their organisations.
Conclusion: Stigma regarding mental ill health has a pervasive and harmful impact on emotional health and wellbeing of police officers and staff involved in CSAE investigations, which creates a sense of lack of emotional safety. Therefore, eliminating stigma and creating a workplace culture that explicitly values and prioritises the emotional health and wellbeing of the workforce would improve the wellbeing of officers and staff. Police organisations could further improve CSAE teams’ wellbeing by developing a continuum of care which is available to workers from recruitment to the end of the role, training managers and supervisors to better support CSAE teams, improving workplace practices, and ensuring high quality, specialist support services are readily and consistently available across forces.
barriers to support, child sexual abuse and exploitation, mental health and wellbeing, police officers and staff, stigma, workplace and police culture
Redmond, Theresa
184df312-b8cf-420d-aea8-701ff2718801
Conway, Paul
765aaaf9-173f-44cf-be9a-c8ffbb51e286
Bailey, Simon
2390608a-63fe-4b17-9a8c-86bd17344d73
Lee, Peter
654ed453-38e8-48dd-afda-cd68435330f4
Lundrigan, Samantha
082e307a-c23f-410a-99fc-ab32c6e88f79
10 May 2023
Redmond, Theresa
184df312-b8cf-420d-aea8-701ff2718801
Conway, Paul
765aaaf9-173f-44cf-be9a-c8ffbb51e286
Bailey, Simon
2390608a-63fe-4b17-9a8c-86bd17344d73
Lee, Peter
654ed453-38e8-48dd-afda-cd68435330f4
Lundrigan, Samantha
082e307a-c23f-410a-99fc-ab32c6e88f79
Redmond, Theresa, Conway, Paul, Bailey, Simon, Lee, Peter and Lundrigan, Samantha
(2023)
How we can protect the protectors: Learning from police officers and staff involved in child sexual abuse and exploitation investigations.
Frontiers in Psychology, 14, [1152446].
(doi:10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1152446).
Abstract
Background: Police officers and staff who work in child sexual abuse and exploitation (CSAE) investigations are routinely exposed to traumatic materials and situations. Despite support services, working in this space can have negative impacts on wellbeing. This paper explores the experiences and perceptions held by police officers and staff involved in CSAE investigations in the United Kingdom, regarding work-related wellbeing support and barriers to accessing such support.
Method: A sample of 661 serving police officers and staff working in CSAE investigations participated in a United Kingdom-wide ‘Protecting the Protectors’ survey. We analysed quantitative and qualitative responses relating to participants’ experiences and perceptions regarding three main areas: (1) availability, usage and helpfulness of existing work-based well-being support; (2) barriers to accessing support; and (3) desired support services.
Findings: Five interconnected themes emerged from the qualitative data that represented participants’ experiences and views of work-based wellbeing support and the barriers to accessing it. These were ‘Lack of trust’, ‘Stigma’, ‘Organisational approaches to wellbeing’, ‘Support services’, and ‘Internalised barriers’. The findings suggest that whilst respondents were aware of work-based support, they indicated most frequently that they ‘never or almost never’ used them. Respondents also identified barriers to accessing support, which related to a perception of a critical or judgmental workplace culture and indicating a lack of trust in their organisations.
Conclusion: Stigma regarding mental ill health has a pervasive and harmful impact on emotional health and wellbeing of police officers and staff involved in CSAE investigations, which creates a sense of lack of emotional safety. Therefore, eliminating stigma and creating a workplace culture that explicitly values and prioritises the emotional health and wellbeing of the workforce would improve the wellbeing of officers and staff. Police organisations could further improve CSAE teams’ wellbeing by developing a continuum of care which is available to workers from recruitment to the end of the role, training managers and supervisors to better support CSAE teams, improving workplace practices, and ensuring high quality, specialist support services are readily and consistently available across forces.
Text
fpsyg-14-1152446
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 29 March 2023
Published date: 10 May 2023
Additional Information:
Copyright © 2023 Redmond, Conway, Bailey, Lee and Lundrigan.
Keywords:
barriers to support, child sexual abuse and exploitation, mental health and wellbeing, police officers and staff, stigma, workplace and police culture
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 478984
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478984
ISSN: 1664-1078
PURE UUID: 189f6846-9f44-4c4d-aa60-4d9ee695a0c5
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Date deposited: 17 Jul 2023 16:38
Last modified: 06 Jun 2024 02:15
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Contributors
Author:
Theresa Redmond
Author:
Paul Conway
Author:
Simon Bailey
Author:
Peter Lee
Author:
Samantha Lundrigan
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