Abstract

PurposeStress research in the UK policing has largely neglected to account for variance in the type of psychosocial hazard officers are exposed to across policing roles, highlighting the need for role‐specific research that is capable of informing similarly specific stress reduction interventions. This study aimed to develop and assess exposure to a taxonomy of psychosocial hazards specific to the UK police custody work, consider the burnout profile of custody officers, explore relations between psychosocial hazard exposure and burnout, and compare the exposures of burned out and non‐burned out custody officers.Design/methodology/approachPreliminary focus groups identified a series of psychosocial hazards specific to the custody officer role. A questionnaire administered to custody officers within a UK territorial police force assessed exposure to these psychosocial hazards and burnout.FindingsTwenty‐six custody‐specific psychosocial hazards were identified, across nine themes. The proportion of custody officers who reported a high degree of burnout was above that found in normative data. Hierarchical regression analyses showed that exposures were positively related to emotional exhaustion and depersonalisation. Unrelated t‐tests showed that respondents who reported high burnout also reported significantly higher exposures across all nine psychosocial hazard themes than those with sub‐threshold burnout scores.Originality/valueThis is the first study to investigate the stress‐related working conditions of the UK custody officers. It provides a foundation for future large‐scale longitudinal studies concerned with validating the current findings and improving the health of officers engaged in this unique policing role.

Highlights

  • In the normative distribution one third of cases score above the high burnout threshold; approximately half of the respondents in the current study scored above the high burnout threshold on two of the three dimensions (EE and DP) and approximately two thirds scored above the threshold for the identification of low personal accomplishment

  • Most of the psychosocial hazards were specific to the custody environment, thereby highlighting the imperative for role-specific psychosocial hazard taxonomies in work-related stress research and practice that involves custody officers

  • The burnout profile of the sampled custody officers was similar to that found in a contemporaneous study of UK police officers (Houdmont, 2012), though considerably higher than that found in previous studies conducted in Canada and The Netherlands for which comparable data is available (Kop et al, 1999; Loo, 1994; Stearns and Moore, 1990)

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Summary

Introduction

This study investigates the psychosocial hazards to which custody officers are exposed and examines relations between psychosocial hazard exposure and burnout. UK police stress research reveals little about the psychosocial hazards to which custody officers are exposed.

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