Abstract

Police mental health is important because police officers usually encounter stressors that cause high levels of stress. In order to better understand mental health for Chinese police, the Zung Self-Rating Depression Scale (SDS) and Symptom Checklist 90-Revised (SCL-90-R) are commonly used in mainland China. Unfortunately, both the SDS and SCL-90-R lack detailed information on their psychometric properties. More specifically, factor structures of the SDS and SCL-90-R have yet to be confirmed among the police population in mainland China. Therefore, the present study compared several factor structures of the SDS and SCL-90-R proposed by prior research and to determine an appropriate structure for the police population. Utilizing cluster sampling, 1151 traffic police officers (1047 males; mean age = 36.6 years [SD = 6.10]) from 49 traffic police units in Jiangxi Province (China) participated in this study. Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) with Akaike information criterion (AIC) was used to decide the best fit structure. In the SDS, the three-factor model (first posited by Kitamura et al.) had the smallest AIC and outperformed other models. In the SCL-90-R, the eight-factor model had the smallest AIC and outperformed the one-factor and nine-factor models. CFA fit indices also showed that both the three-factor model in the SDS and the eight-factor model in the SCL-90-R had satisfactory fit. The present study’s results support the use of both SDS and SCL-90-R for police officers in mainland China.

Highlights

  • As a force for maintaining social stability, the police are the executors of maintaining public order and protecting the safety of citizens

  • The percentages of participants with depression or psychological distress were 59.6% using Self-Rating Depression Scale (SDS) index and 52.0% using the total score of SCL-90-R

  • The SDS was significantly positively correlated with all SCL-90-R subscales (r scores ranging from 0.50 to 0.66)

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Summary

Introduction

As a force for maintaining social stability, the police are the executors of maintaining public order and protecting the safety of citizens. In order to implement relevant laws and regulations in society, the police often work overtime and face unexpected stressful conflicts. According to a report from the Occupational Disease Intelligence Network for Surveillance of Occupational Stress and Mental Illness, the proportion of police officers suffering from psychological disorders ranks in the top three among various occupations [3]. This situation is severe in China’s rapidly developing society because the police have to undertake increasingly unfamiliar tasks.

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