Assessment of the Mental Health of Police Officers: A Systematic Review of Specific Instruments
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
2.3. Screening and Quality Appraisal
2.4. Data Extraction and Synthesis
3. Results
3.1. Quality Assessment of the Included Studies
3.2. Characteristics of the Included Studies
3.3. Characterization of the Instruments Identified in the Review
3.4. Psychometric Properties of the Instruments Identified in the Review
3.5. Work-Related Stress Instruments
3.6. Burnout Instruments
3.7. Coping and Satisfaction with Work Instruments
3.8. Risk of Psychological Distress Instruments
3.9. Mental Health Disorders Instruments
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Database | Search Strategies |
---|---|
MEDLINE/PubMed | ((Police) AND (Mental health)) AND (Surveys and Questionnaires) |
Web of Science | ((ALL = (Police)) AND ALL = (Mental health)) AND ALL = (Surveys and Questionnaires) |
Scopus | ((police) AND (mental AND health) AND (surveys AND questionnaires)) |
Embase | ‘police’ AND ‘mental health’ AND ‘surveys and questionnaires’ |
CINAHL (EBSCO) | police AND mental health AND (surveys and questionnaires) |
Virtual Health Library (VHL) | “Police” AND “Mental health” AND “Surveys and Questionnaires” |
Code/Reference | Origin | Study Design | Sample Description | Sample Size (n) | Instruments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
S1 Maran et al. 2015 [21] | Italy | Cross-sectional | Unit managers, non-commissioned officers, emergency officers, and traffic patrol officers | 617 | Brief COPE; Police Stress Questionnaire-Operational and Organizational (PSQ-OP and PSQ-Org) |
S2 Berg et al. 2006 [22] | Norway | Cross-sectional | Investigation police, uniformed officers, and administration officers | 3272 | Norwegian Police Stress Survey (NPSS); Job Stress Survey (JSS); Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI) |
S3 Berg et al. 2005 [23] | Norway | Methodological instrument creation | Police officers | 3272 | Job Stress Survey (JSS) and Norwegian Police Stress Survey (NPSS) |
S4 Carleton et al. 2020 [24] | Canada | Cross-sectional | Correctional officers, federal police, municipal/provincial police, public safety communications officials | 3118 | PSQ-Op; PSQ-Org and Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) |
S5 Fuente-Solana et al. 2020 [25] | Spain | Methodological instrument validation | Officers, middle managers, and managers | 1884 | Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI); Granada Burnout Questionnaire (GBQ) |
S6 Figueiredo-Ferraz et al. 2014 [26] | Portugal | Methodological instrument validation | Public safety police | 245 | Spanish Burnout Inventory (SBI) |
S7 García-Rivera et al. 2020 [27] | Mexico | Cross-sectional | Preventive police officers | 276 | Spanish Burnout Inventory (SBI) and PSQ-Op |
S8 Harizanova et al. 2016 [28] | Bulgaria | Methodological instrument validation | Correctional Officers | 50 | V. Bokyo Burnout Inventory (VBBI) |
S9 Jelaš et al. 2020 [29] | Trinidad and Tobago | Cross-sectional | Police officers | 331 | MBI; PSQ-Op; PSQ-Org |
S10 Juniper et al. 2010 [30] | United Kingdom | Methodological instrument creation | Officers, police community support officers, and civilian staff | 822 | Work and well-being assessment for police (WWBAP) |
S11 Luceño-Moreno et al. 2021 [31] | Spain | Methodological instrument validation | Patrol officers, corporals, non-commissioned officers, police commissioner officers | 217 | Effort-Reward Imbalance Questionnaire (ERIQ); DECORE-21; MBI |
S12 Maurya, 2019 [32] | India | Mixed methods | Civil police | 203 | Police role expectations (PRE) |
S13 Mohamed et al. 2022 [33] | Malaysia | Cross-sectional | Police officers | 1641 | PSQ-Op and PSQ-Org |
S14 Queirós et al. 2020 [34] | Portugal | Cross-sectional | National police | 1131 | PSQ-OP; PSQ-Org; Brief COPE and SBI |
S15 Talavera-Velasco et al. 2018 [35] | Spain | Methodological instrument validation | Local police officers | 223 | DECORE-21 |
S16 Van Hasselt et al. 2003 [36] | United States of America (USA) | Methodological instrument creation | Detectives, traffic officers, SWAT | 166 | Law Enforcement Officer Stress Survey (LEOSS) |
S17 Winwood et al. 2009 [37] | United States of America (USA) | Methodological instrument creation | Frontline police officers | 217 | Psychological Injury Risk Indicator (PIRI) |
S18 Anders et al. 2022 [38] | Switzerland | Cross-sectional | Emergency police, judicial police, community police, administrative, traffic, special forces, and dispatch center | 1073 | The Impact of Event Scale—Revised (TIES-r); MBI; Brief COPE, The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) and suicide ideation from the Beck Depression Inventory—II (SI-BDI-II). |
S19 Andrews et al. 2022 [39] | Canada | Cross-sectional | Coast Guard and Conservation Officers | 412 | General Anxiety Disorder-7 (GAD-7) and Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) |
S20 Beshai et al. 2022 [40] | Canada | Cross-sectional | Royal Canadian Mounted Police | 173 | Job Descriptive Index (JDI); PHQ-9; GAD-7; Brief Resilience Scale (BRS); Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) |
S21 Huang et al. 2022 [41] | Canada | Methodological instrument validation | Police officers | 22 | MBI; PHQ-9; GAD-7; BRS; PSS |
S22 Jeganish et al. 2024 [42] | India | Cross-sectional | State police | 142 | PHQ-9 and PSS |
S23 Kyron et al. 2022 [43] | Australia | Cross-sectional | Police officers | 8088 | BRS |
S24 Lee; Hans, 2022 [44] | South Korea | Cross-sectional | Police officers | 269 | TIES-r |
S25 Liao et al. 2022 [45] | China | Methodological instrument validation | Police officers | 767 | Police Mental Health Ability (PMHA) |
S26 Ohlendorf et al. 2023 [46] | Germany | Cross-sectional | Federal police | 200 | Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire (COPSOQ) and PSQ-Op |
S27 Rohwer et al. 2022 [47] | Germany | Cohort | Police officers | 116 | Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire (COPSOQ) |
S28 Tavares et al. 2022 [48] | Brazil | Mixed methods | Civil Police | 237 | Self-Reported Questionnaire-20 (SRQ-20) |
S29 Wu et al. 2023 [49] | China | Cross-sectional | Security police, criminal police, constable police, community police, and internal work police | 358 | Symptom Checklist 90 (SCL-90) |
Instrument | Outcomes | Subscales/Domains | Items | Cutoff Values | Used in | Police Specific? |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI) | Burnout. | Emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and personal achievement. | 22 | None. | S2, S5, S9, S11, S18, and S21 | No |
Granada Burnout Questionnaire (GBQ) | Burnout. | Emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and personal achievement. | 26 | None. | S5 | No |
Spanish Burnout Inventory (SBI) | Burnout. | Enthusiasm for work, psychic wear, indolence, and guilt. | 20 | Low scores on enthusiasm for work and high scores on psychic exhaustion and indolence represent high levels of burnout syndrome. | S6, S7, and S14 | No |
V. Bokyo Burnout Inventory (VBBI) | Burnout. | Stress, resistibility, and exhaustion. | 84 | Scoring is carried out in two stages. The first evaluates each symptom: <9 (symptom is not important), 10–15 (symptom settling in), and >16 (active symptom). After the sum of the symptoms, there are scores for each of the three phases, where <36 = the phase is not developed, 37–60 = in the process of development, and >61 = the phase is developed. | S8 | No |
The Job Stress Survey (JSS) | Occupational stress. | Pressure at work, lack of support. | 30 | Each stressor is evaluated on a Likert scale from 0 to 9+ points by frequency of occurrence in the last six months. The sum is the result of the scale. | S2 and S3 | No |
The Norwegian Police Stress Survey (NPSS) | Occupational stress. | Job pressure, lack of support, serious operational tasks, and work injuries. | 36 | None. | S2 and S3 | Yes |
Effort-Reward Imbalance Questionnaire (ERIQ) | Occupational stress. | Effort, reward (esteem, financial, status, and job security), and overcommitment. | 23 | Effort score from 6 to 30; reward from 11 to 55; overcommitment score from 6 to 30. The effort and overcommitment scores are added together, which indicate imbalance and occupational stress if they are higher than the reward score | S11 | No |
Law Enforcement Officer Stress Survey (LEOSS) | Occupational stress. | None. | 25 | None. | S16 | Yes |
Operational Police Stress Questionnaire (PSQ-OP) | Occupational stress. | None. | 20 | The higher the score, the greater the stress. | S1, S4, S7, S9, S13, S14, S18, and S26 | Yes |
Organizational Police Stress Questionnaire (PSQ-Org) | Occupational stress. | None. | 20 | The higher the score, the greater the stress. | S1, S4, S9, S13, S14, and S18 | Yes |
Work and Well-Being Assessment for Police (WWBAP) | Work-related well-being. | Advancement, home work interface, job, organizational, physical, psychological, relationships, workload, and facilities. | 46 | The higher the score, the lower the well-being. | S10 | Yes |
Police Role Expectations (PRE) | Expectations regarding the job. | Aggressiveness, facilitative, conformist, and authoritative. | 18 | The score from 18 to 90, the higher the score, the higher the job expectation. | S12 | Yes |
Psychological Injury Risk Indicator (PIRI) | Risk of psychological injury. | Turbulent sleep/poor sleep hygiene, maladaptive experience, chronic fatigue, consistent failure to recover physical and emotional energy, PTSD symptomatology, and alcohol abuse/self-medication related to stress. | 30 | A standardized PIRI score of more than 25 corresponded to possible psychological injury, while higher scores indicate a greater risk of injury. | S17 | Yes |
DECORE-21 | Risk of psychological injury. | Cognitive demands, control, work organization support, and rewards. | 21 | The higher the score, the greater the psychological risk suffered at work. | S11 and S15 | No |
Brief COPE | Coping strategies. | Acceptance, active coping, guilt, behavioral withdrawal, denial, distraction, emotional expression, emotional support, humor, instrumental support, planning, positive reinterpretation, religion, and substance use. | 28 | On a four-point Likert scale, ranging from zero points to three points depending on the answer; higher scores reflect a higher tendency to implement corresponding coping strategies. | S1, S14, and S18 | No |
The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) | Anxiety and depression. | Anxiety and depression. | 14 | The typical clinical threshold for the presence of anxiety is a score ≥ 8 and similarly for depression and a total score ≥ 11 may reflect an adjustment disorder in general, although due to anxiety or depression. | S18 | No |
Suicide ideation from Beck’s Depression Inventory (BDI-II) | Suicide risk. | None. | 1 | Arranged on a 4-point Likert scale as follows: 0 (“I have no thoughts of killing myself”), 1 (“I have thoughts of killing myself, but I wouldn’t do it”), 2 (“I would like to kill myself”), and 3 (“I would kill myself if I had the chance”). | S18 | No |
Abridged Job Descriptive Index (JDI) | Overall job satisfaction. | Job, compensation, promotion, supervision, and co-workers. | 8 | None. | S20 | No |
The Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) | Depression. | None. | 8 | It is organized on a 4-point Likert scale (0 = never to 3 = almost every day). Cutoff is a PHQ-9 score > or = 10. | S19–S22 | No. |
The Generalized Anxiety Disorder Scale (GAD-7) | Anxiety. | None. | 7 | It is organized on a 4-point Likert scale (0 = never to 3 = almost every day). Cutoff is a PHQ-9 score > or = 10. | S19–S21 | No |
The Brief Resilience Scale (BRS) | Resilience and ability to recover from adversity. | None. | 6 | Organized in a 5-point Likert scale to assess the extent to which the interviewed agreed to give a statement, in which 1 means completely disagree and 5 means completely agree. | S20, S21, and S23 | No |
The Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) | Stress. | None. | 10 | It is organized in a Cohen scale (0, never; 1, almost never; 2, sometimes; 3, quite often; 4, very often) to score the scale, A high score indicates a high perception of stress. | S4, S20–S22 | No. |
Self-Reporting Questionnaire (SRQ-20) | Minor psychiatric disorders. | Anxious and depressed mood, somatic mood, decreased energy, and depressive thoughts. | 20 | If the values are equal to or greater than 7 points, or a greater proportion of positive responses in both sexes, based on a study with police officers, then this indicates minor psychological problems. | S28 | No. |
Symptom Checklist 90 (SCL-90) | Psychological suffering and symptoms of psychopathology. | Somatization, obsessive-compulsive, interpersonal sensitivity, depression, anxiety, hostility, phobic anxiety, paranoid ideation, and psychosis. | 90 | If the number of positive numbers is superior to 43 points or the total score is superior to 160. | S29 | No. |
Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire (COPSOQ) | Job satisfaction. | None. | 7 | Arranged on a four-point Likert scale, ranging from 1 = very satisfied to 4 = very unhappy. The cutoff points vary from 0 (lowest job satisfaction) to 100 (highest job satisfaction. | S26 and S27 | No. |
Police mental health ability (PMHA) | Occupational stress. | Cognitive intelligence, emotional catharsis, quick determination, behavioral impulse, and search for rewards. | 20 | It works with a “yes” or “no” response. The cutoff values are not mentioned. | S26 | Yes. |
The Impact of Event Scale—Revised (TIES-r) | Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. | Intrusion, avoidance, and hypervigilance. | 22 | A 5-point Likert scale, ranging from 0 (“not at all”) to 4 (“extremely”). The sum of the three subscale scores determines a composite PTSD score for which the typical clinical threshold for the presence of PTSD is a score ≥ 33. | S18 and S24 | No |
Instrument | Cronbach’s Alpha | Test–Retest | Item-item Correlation |
---|---|---|---|
Brief COPE | 0.85 | 0.71 | |
Brief Resilience Scale (BRS) | 0.8 | 0.69 | |
Copenhagen Psychosocial Questionnaire (COPSOQ) | 0.82 | ||
DECORE-21 | In subscales: 0.6 in cognitive demands, 0.78 in control, 0.84 in organizational support, and 0.92 in rewards. | ||
Effort-Reward Imbalance Questionnaire (ERIQ) | In subscales: effort with 0.78, reward with 0.91, and overcommitment with 0.81. | ||
Generalized Anxiety Disorder Scale (GAD-7) | 0.89 | 0.83 | 0.65 |
Granada Burnout Questionnaire (GBQ) | In subscales: emotional exhaustion = 0.87, depersonalization = 0.85, and personal accomplishment = 0.8 | ||
Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) | 0.78 and 0.73 for the anxiety and depression subscales. | ||
Job Descriptive Index (JDI) | 0.85 | ||
Job Stress Survey (JSS) | For the severity and frequency of job pressure, the scores were 0.83 and 0.85, whereas for the severity and frequency of lack of support, the scores were 0.83 and 0.85, respectively. | ||
Law Enforcement Officer Stress Survey (LEOSS) | 0.87 | 0.67 | |
Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI) | 0.87, 0.73, and 0.80 for the exhaustion, depersonalization, and achievement subscales | ||
Norwegian Police Stress Survey (NPSS) | For the severity and frequency of serious operational tasks, the scores were 0.82 and 0.83. For the severity and frequency of work injuries, the scores were 0.84 and 0.76, respectively. | ||
Operational Police Stress Questionnaire (PSQ-OP) | 0.94 | 0.7 | |
Organizational Police Stress Questionnaire (PSQ-Org) | 0.94 | 0.72 | |
Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) | 0.9 | 0.94 | |
Perceived Stress Scale (PSS) | 0.87 | 0.86 | |
Police mental health ability (PMHA) | 0.863 | 0.73 | |
Police Role Expectations (PRE) | 0.77 | ||
Psychological Injury Risk Indicator (PIRI) | 0.83 | 0.64 | |
Self-Reporting Questionnaire (SRQ20) | 0.84 | ||
Spanish Burnout Inventory (SBI) | In subscales: work excitement = 0.64; mental exhaustion = 0.85; guilt = 0.79; and indolence = 0.71 | 0.7 | |
Suicide ideation from Beck’s Depression Inventory (BDI-II) | 0.85 | ||
Symptom Checklist 90 (SCL-90) | 0.93 | ||
The Impact of Event Scale—Revised (TIES-r) | 0.92, 0.83, and 0.85 for the intrusion, avoidance, and hypervigilance subscales | 0.86 | |
V. Bokyo Burnout Inventory (VBBI) | 0.94 | 0.71 | |
Work and Well-Being Assessment for Police (WWBAP) | 0.74–0.86 in subscales | 0.7 |
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Teles, D.O.; Oliveira, R.A.d.; Parnaíba, A.L.d.O.; Rios, M.A.; Machado, M.B.; Aquino, P.d.S.; Menezes, P.R.d.; Ribeiro, S.G.; Soares, P.R.A.L.; Biazus Dalcin, C.; et al. Assessment of the Mental Health of Police Officers: A Systematic Review of Specific Instruments. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2024, 21, 1300. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21101300
Teles DO, Oliveira RAd, Parnaíba ALdO, Rios MA, Machado MB, Aquino PdS, Menezes PRd, Ribeiro SG, Soares PRAL, Biazus Dalcin C, et al. Assessment of the Mental Health of Police Officers: A Systematic Review of Specific Instruments. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2024; 21(10):1300. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21101300
Chicago/Turabian StyleTeles, Davi Oliveira, Raquel Alves de Oliveira, Anna Luísa de Oliveira Parnaíba, Mariana Araújo Rios, Melissa Bezerra Machado, Priscila de Souza Aquino, Purdenciana Ribeiro de Menezes, Samila Gomes Ribeiro, Paula Renata Amorim Lessa Soares, Camila Biazus Dalcin, and et al. 2024. "Assessment of the Mental Health of Police Officers: A Systematic Review of Specific Instruments" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 21, no. 10: 1300. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21101300
APA StyleTeles, D. O., Oliveira, R. A. d., Parnaíba, A. L. d. O., Rios, M. A., Machado, M. B., Aquino, P. d. S., Menezes, P. R. d., Ribeiro, S. G., Soares, P. R. A. L., Biazus Dalcin, C., & Pinheiro, A. K. B. (2024). Assessment of the Mental Health of Police Officers: A Systematic Review of Specific Instruments. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 21(10), 1300. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph21101300