Abstract

Correctional service employees in Ontario, Canada (n = 1487) began an online survey available from 2017 to 2018 designed to assess the prevalence and correlates of mental health challenges. Participants who provided data for the current study (n = 1032) included provincial staff working in institutional wellness (e.g., nurses) (n = 71), training (e.g., program officers) (n = 26), governance (e.g., superintendents) (n = 82), correctional officers (n = 553), administration (e.g., record keeping) (n = 25), and probation officers (n = 144, parole officers). Correctional officers, workers in institutional administration and governance positions, and probation officers reported elevated risk for mental disorders, most notably posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and major depressive disorder. Among institutional correctional staff, 61.0% of governance employees, 59.0% of correctional officers, 43.7% of wellness staff, 50.0% of training staff, and 52.0% of administrative staff screened positive for one or more mental disorders. In addition, 63.2% of probation officers screened positive for one or more mental disorders. Women working as correctional officers were more likely to screen positive than men (p < 0.05). Across all correctional occupational categories positive screens for each disorder were: 30.7% for PTSD, 37.0% for major depressive disorder, 30.5% for generalized anxiety disorder, and 58.2% for one or more mental disorders. Participants between ages 40 and 49 years, working in institutional governance, as an institutional correctional officer, or as a probational officer, separated or divorced, were all factors associated (p < 0.05) with screening positive for one or more mental disorders. The prevalence of mental health challenges for provincial correctional workers appears to be higher than federal correctional workers in Canada and further supports the need for evidence-based mental health solutions.

Highlights

  • A systematic review demonstrated the limited research on correctional worker’s mental health [1]

  • Positive screenings for any mental disorder were lowest for persons working in wellness (i.e., 43.7%) and highest for probation officers (i.e., 63.2%)

  • Consistent with previous research [2,38], the current results suggest that persons who were in married/common-law relationships were significantly less likely to screen positive for a mental health disorder than separated/divorced/widowed participants; contrasting previous research [2], the current results did not identify significant differences in positive screenings for people in a married/common-law relationship relative to people who were single

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Summary

Introduction

A systematic review demonstrated the limited research on correctional worker’s mental health (i.e., six published studies were identified) [1]. Samples sizes ranged from n = 65 to n = 3599, with substantial diversity in measurement tools. The results varied substantially (i.e., posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD; e.g., symptoms of intrusions, avoidance, negative mood, alterations in arousal, and reactivity) 15.0% to 29.1%; major depressive disorder (e.g., depressed mood or diminished interest in activities) 24.0% to 59.7%; and anxiety (e.g., excessive anxiety and worry) 12.2% to 37.9%), Int. J. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 2203; doi:10.3390/ijerph17072203 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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