Associations between individual cognitive factors, mode of exposure and depression symptoms in practitioners working with aversive crime material

Fazeelat Duran*, Jessica Woodhams

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Background: There is extensive literature on front-line officers and investigators exposure to trauma and its negative impact on them. However, there are analytical practitioners in law enforcement who indirectly work with the traumatic experiences of other people daily, but are seldom the focus of academic research.

Objective: Our goal was to conduct the first international study with these practitioners to identify the risk of depression symptoms and establish whether potentially modifiable risk factors (belief in a just world, mental imagery and thought suppression) and work-related characteristics (medium of exposure) are associated with depression.

Method: 99 analysts and secondary investigators employed in police and law enforcement organizations from the UK, Europe and Canada participated in the study. The online survey was advertised to employees via their employers but hosted without employer access. Multiple regression was used to analyze the data.

Results: After controlling for age, gender, ethnicity, previous exposure to trauma, and marital status, four potential risk factors were identified. Analytical practitioners with vivid mental imagery, those exposed to crime material via auditory and visual means, those who suppressed intrusive thoughts, and those who believed in a just world reported more depressive symptoms.

Conclusions: The majority of our sample reported clinical levels of depressive symptoms. Four potential risk factors accounted for just under half of the variance in depression scores. We consider strategies that can be used to mitigate the potential negative influence of these factors and suggest that these are established as risk factors for depression symptoms via future longitudinal research.
Original languageEnglish
Article number2264612
Number of pages9
JournalEuropean Journal of Psychotraumatology
Volume14
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 26 Oct 2023

Bibliographical note

Funding:
This work was supported by AXA Research Fund.

Keywords

  • Depressive symptoms
  • aversive crime material
  • modifiable risk factors
  • mental imagery
  • Thought suppression
  • belief in a just world

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