Publication | Closed Access
Can police be trained in trauma processing to minimise PTSD symptoms? Feasibility and proof of concept with a newly recruited UK police population
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References
2019
Year
Traumatic Brain InjuryPsychiatric EvaluationPersonal ResilienceTraumatologyUk Police PopulationTrauma-informed CounselingInjury PreventionMental HealthPolice PsychologyCognitive RehabilitationTrauma In ChildTrauma Systems PlanningPsychologyUk Police ForceTrauma (Addiction Psychology)Trauma SystemMemoryBrain InjuryPtsd SymptomsHealth SciencesNeuropsychological TraumaTrauma ProcessingPsychiatryRehabilitationTrauma TreatmentTrauma CareMemory AssessmentTrauma PsychologyConcussionMedicinePsychopathologyPost-traumatic Stress Disorder
Neuropsychological trauma processing techniques based on hippocampal-dependent spatial and episodic memory were trialled with 71 newly recruited officers within one UK police force between March 2018 and February 2019. Results indicate that the skills are teachable within an operational training environment, have a positive impact on feelings of ease about difficult or traumatic work-related incidents, can improve recall of events and may mitigate against the impact of age and trauma exposure on memory. Participants report the techniques to be useable, sharable and operationally relevant to trauma management and personal resilience. Results will inform a larger randomised controlled trial.
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