| Literature DB >> 34377216 |
Shuanghong Chen1, Daniel W Grupe2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To test the magnitude of the relationship between self-reported stressor exposure and perceived stress in police officers using a novel measure of daily work events, and whether dispositional mindfulness and resilience moderate this relationship.Entities:
Keywords: Law enforcement officers; Mindfulness; Perceived stress; Resilience; Stressor exposure
Year: 2021 PMID: 34377216 PMCID: PMC8339391 DOI: 10.1007/s12671-021-01707-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mindfulness (N Y) ISSN: 1868-8527
Demographic and work information (N = 114)
| Mean (SD)/ | |
|---|---|
| Age | 40.0 (8.4); range = 23–58 |
| Years of policing | 14.1 (8.1); range = 0.1–35.8 |
| Gender | |
| Male | 67 (58.8%) |
| Female | 47 (41.2%) |
| Race | |
| White | 95 (83.3%) |
| Black or African American | 4 (3.5%) |
| Asian | 3 (2.6%) |
| Native American or Alaskan Native | 2 (1.8%) |
| More than one race | 8 (7.0%) |
| Unknown | 2 (1.8%) |
| Ethnicity | |
| Hispanic or Latino | 3 (2.6%) |
| Not Hispanic or Latino | 110 (96.5%) |
| Unknown | 1 (0.9%) |
| Highest level of education | |
| Some college education | 13 (11.4%) |
| Bachelors/4-year degree | 72 (63.2%) |
| Some postgraduate education | 11 (9.6%) |
| Postgraduate/professional degree | 18 (15.8%) |
| Shift/work detail | |
| 1st detail/days (~ 7:00–15:00) | 55 (48.2%) |
| 2nd detail/day “power shift” (~ 12:00–20:00) | 8 (7.0%) |
| 3rd detail/evenings (~ 15:00–23:00) | 35 (30.7%) |
| 4th detail/night “power shift” (~ 19:00–3:00) | 6 (5.3%) |
| 5th detail/nights (~ 23:00–7:00) | 10 (8.8%) |
| Rank/job title | |
| Police officer | 45 (39.5%) |
| Sheriff’s deputy | 30 (26.3%) |
| Detective | 21 (18.4%) |
| Sergeant | 11 (9.7%) |
| Investigator | 3 (2.6%) |
| Lieutenant | 3 (2.6%) |
| Captain | 1 (0.9%) |
| Agency | |
| Madison Police Department | 64 (56.1%) |
| Dane County Sheriff’s Office | 40 (35.1%) |
| University of Wisconsin–Madison Police Department | 10 (8.8%) |
Items on the 8-item work events log and factor loadings on each component (N = 113)
| Event category | Component 1: acute/traumatic stressors | Component 2: routine stressors | Component 3: interpersonal stressors |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Challenges or frustration with supervisors and leadership | .01 | .01 | |
| 2. Conflict with coworkers | .17 | .03 | |
| 4. Required paperwork and reports (e.g., Tracs, routine reports, follow-up) and other administrative responsibilities | -.04 | .08 | |
| 5. Increased demands stemming from patrol or other staff shortages | .29 | .18 | |
| 6. “Routine” calls for service | .20 | − .22 | |
| 7. Arresting or detaining suspects | .33 | .03 | |
| 8. Responding to traumatic events (e.g., MVA, overdose, domestics, death, or injury) | .14 | .14 | |
| 9. Incidents involving threat of injury or bodily harm to yourself or fellow officers | − .03 | .03 | |
Results of the final principal component analysis after removing items with double-loading (#10) or loading < 0.40 on all 3 components (#3)
Bivariate correlations between work events log perceived stress and alternative stress measures (N = 110)
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Perceived stress component 1a | — | ||||||
| Perceived stress component 2b | .65*** | — | |||||
| Perceived stress component 3c | .26** | .44*** | — | ||||
| Work events-daily overall stress (single item) | .26** | .41*** | .25** | — | |||
| Operational Police Stress Questionnaire | .29** | .52*** | .30** | .23* | — | ||
| Organizational Police Stress Questionnaire | .23* | .49*** | .39*** | .14 | .65*** | — | |
| Perceived Stress Scale | .09 | .30** | .20* | .10 | .45*** | .32*** | — |
For correlations involving perceived stress scores from the work events log, scores reflect averages across all days that participants completed the log
*p < .05; ** p < .01; ***p < .001
aComponent 1 assessed perceived stress for acute/traumatic stressors
bComponent 2 assessed perceived stress for routine stressors
cComponent 3 assessed perceived stress for interpersonal stressors
Fig. 1Associations between exposure and perceived stress for each component on the work events log. Each line represents the estimated linear relationship between exposure and perceived stress for each participant across 4–6 days
Mixed models to test the moderating effect of mindfulness on the association between stress exposure and perceived stress
| Variable | Error | partial | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stress component 1 | ||||||
| Exposure component 1a | 1.54 | 0.66 | 5.44 | 66.69 | .023 | .08 |
| Mindfulness | 0.002 | 0.01 | 0.10 | 101.37 | .756 | .001 |
| Days | — | — | 0.39 | 372.28 | .853 | .01 |
| Cohort | 0.15 | 0.16 | 0.87 | 103.59 | .354 | .01 |
| Exposure component 1 * mindfulness | 0.001 | 0.01 | 0.03 | 66.86 | .858 | .00 |
| Stress component 2 | ||||||
| Exposure component 2 | 2.54 | 0.60 | 18.20 | 82.79 | < .001 | .18 |
| Mindfulness | − 0.01 | 0.01 | 1.75 | 102.87 | .189 | .02 |
| Days | — | — | 1.22 | 411.94 | .301 | .02 |
| Cohort | 0.26 | 0.20 | 1.73 | 77.32 | .192 | .02 |
| Exposure component 2 * mindfulness | − 0.02 | 0.01 | 4.00 | 82.62 | .049 | .05 |
| Stress component 3 | ||||||
| Exposure component 3 | 2.34 | 0.61 | 15.02 | 78.76 | < .001 | .16 |
| Mindfulness | − 0.02 | 0.01 | 5.01 | 105.20 | .027 | .05 |
| Days | — | — | 1.11 | 409.70 | .357 | .01 |
| Cohort | 0.17 | 0.18 | 0.94 | 93.04 | .334 | .01 |
| Exposure component 3 * mindfulness | − 0.01 | 0.01 | 2.13 | 80.56 | .148 | .03 |
Component 1 assessed acute/traumatic stressors; component 2 assessed routine stressors; component 3 assessed interpersonal stressors aMean-centered scores (within individuals) were used for each exposure component
Fig. 2Interaction of routine stressor exposure and mindfulness on perceived stress from the work events log. For acute/traumatic stressors (component 1), there were no effects involving trait mindfulness. For routine stressors (component 2), the significant interaction between mindfulness and exposure reflected relatively attenuated perceived stress with increasing exposure for individuals with higher levels of trait mindfulness. For interpersonal stressors (component 3), there was a significant main effect of mindfulness, with lower perceived stress for individuals higher in trait mindfulness. Each panel reflects mean-centered exposure scores and predicted values of perceived stress at different levels of trait mindfulness from mixed regression models (see Table 4)