Protecting the protectors: moral injury, coping styles, and mental health of UK police officers and staff investigating child sexual abuse material
Protecting the protectors: moral injury, coping styles, and mental health of UK police officers and staff investigating child sexual abuse material
Police officers and staff who investigate child sexual abuse material (CSAM) may be at elevated risk for mental health problems, which may be mitigated or exacerbated by institutional and interpersonal factors. The current work examined mental health in a large sample of UK CSAM investigators (N=661). Results suggest substantially elevated rates of depression and anxiety but not PTSD. Feeling successful and supported powerfully buffered against negative outcomes, whereas moral injury—particularly feelings of institutional betrayal—predicted worse outcomes. Although exposure to CSAM and contact with victims predicted worse outcomes, these effects were much smaller. Regarding coping styles, self-blame, rumination, catastrophizing, withdrawal, ignoring, and negative religious coping predicted worse outcomes, whereas positive refocusing, seeking distraction, and social support were effective. These results held controlling for demographics. These results suggest that UK CSAM police officers and staff experience elevated depression and anxiety, but institutional and interpersonal support can buffer outcomes.
Conway, Paul
765aaaf9-173f-44cf-be9a-c8ffbb51e286
Redmond, Theresa
184df312-b8cf-420d-aea8-701ff2718801
Lundrigan, Samantha
082e307a-c23f-410a-99fc-ab32c6e88f79
Davy, Deanna
7d45b2f3-0f2f-4e43-8793-56a1fdd53cb0
Bailey, Simon
2390608a-63fe-4b17-9a8c-86bd17344d73
Lee, Peter
654ed453-38e8-48dd-afda-cd68435330f4
Conway, Paul
765aaaf9-173f-44cf-be9a-c8ffbb51e286
Redmond, Theresa
184df312-b8cf-420d-aea8-701ff2718801
Lundrigan, Samantha
082e307a-c23f-410a-99fc-ab32c6e88f79
Davy, Deanna
7d45b2f3-0f2f-4e43-8793-56a1fdd53cb0
Bailey, Simon
2390608a-63fe-4b17-9a8c-86bd17344d73
Lee, Peter
654ed453-38e8-48dd-afda-cd68435330f4
Conway, Paul, Redmond, Theresa, Lundrigan, Samantha, Davy, Deanna, Bailey, Simon and Lee, Peter
(2024)
Protecting the protectors: moral injury, coping styles, and mental health of UK police officers and staff investigating child sexual abuse material.
Depression and Anxiety.
(In Press)
Abstract
Police officers and staff who investigate child sexual abuse material (CSAM) may be at elevated risk for mental health problems, which may be mitigated or exacerbated by institutional and interpersonal factors. The current work examined mental health in a large sample of UK CSAM investigators (N=661). Results suggest substantially elevated rates of depression and anxiety but not PTSD. Feeling successful and supported powerfully buffered against negative outcomes, whereas moral injury—particularly feelings of institutional betrayal—predicted worse outcomes. Although exposure to CSAM and contact with victims predicted worse outcomes, these effects were much smaller. Regarding coping styles, self-blame, rumination, catastrophizing, withdrawal, ignoring, and negative religious coping predicted worse outcomes, whereas positive refocusing, seeking distraction, and social support were effective. These results held controlling for demographics. These results suggest that UK CSAM police officers and staff experience elevated depression and anxiety, but institutional and interpersonal support can buffer outcomes.
Text
Conway et al, 2024, Protecting the Protectors Moral Injury, Coping Styles, and Mental Health of UK Police, Depression & Anxiety
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Accepted/In Press date: 21 August 2024
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 495755
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495755
PURE UUID: 1bd971a5-63df-4535-a3b6-28777363ade0
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Date deposited: 21 Nov 2024 17:51
Last modified: 22 Nov 2024 03:05
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Contributors
Author:
Paul Conway
Author:
Theresa Redmond
Author:
Samantha Lundrigan
Author:
Deanna Davy
Author:
Simon Bailey
Author:
Peter Lee
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