Physiological Responses to Organizational Stressors Among Police Managers.
Paula Maria Di NotaSarah Caroline ScottJuha-Matti HuhtaHarri GustafsbergJudith Pizarro AndersenPublished in: Applied psychophysiology and biofeedback (2024)
Police officers demonstrate increased risk of physical and mental health conditions due to repeated and prolonged exposure to stressful occupational conditions. Occupational stress is broken into two types: operational stress, related to the content of field duties (e.g., physical demands); and organizational stress, related to cultural and structural contexts (e.g., interpersonal relationships). Applied police research focuses on physiological activation in operational tasks as a mechanism explaining health risk and non-optimal performance outcomes. However, recent survey-based studies indicate numerous organizational stressors associated with self-reported mental health symptoms. The question of whether organizational stressors elicit significant physiological activity remains unknown. The current proof-of-concept field study tests the hypothesis that police managers will display significant physiological reactivity before, during, and after engaging in reality-based scenarios representative of stressful police management tasks developed from evidence-based pedagogical approaches. A sample of 25 training police managers (7 female, M = 16 +/- 5.3 years of experience) completed 5 reality-based scenarios, including resolving a heated conflict between colleagues, delivering negative feedback to a subordinate, and critical incident command. Significant increases in heart rate relative to rest were observed during all tasks, and in anticipation of several tasks. Greater increases in reactive heart rate were associated with longer recovery times. Sex differences and relationships between objective biological and subjective psychological measures of stress are discussed. The current findings demonstrate significant physiological responses to organizational stressors similar to levels observed during operational tasks, despite the absence of physical or aerobic exertion. Implications for police health and training are discussed.
Keyphrases
- mental health
- heart rate
- working memory
- heart rate variability
- blood pressure
- health risk
- physical activity
- climate change
- mental illness
- stress induced
- healthcare
- public health
- virtual reality
- heavy metals
- sleep quality
- depressive symptoms
- metabolic syndrome
- drinking water
- high intensity
- risk assessment
- skeletal muscle
- social media
- human health
- heat stress
- weight loss
- patient reported