What's it all about?

The Trauma Resilience in policing project explores how to better support the brain’s ability to process trauma exposure and maintain resilience in contemporary operational policing.

Police Care UK has funded a team at Cambridge University to undertake four key themes (see below). Together we are providing practical techniques, training materials and evidence-based insight to bring real effective change to trauma management for police officers and staff, volunteers and their families.

The project asked three key questions:

We have now answered these questions and are now working with decisions-makers and police officers and staff across the UK to bring about real change to on-the-job trauma processing, to everyday working practices in at-risk roles and to awareness raising and support for those with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).

Trauma exposure is part of everyday policing, but its impact on the wellbeing and function of officers and staff across the service has been overlooked, with severe consequences for individual’s mental health, for organisational culture, and for public safety. Being supported in managing trauma on the job should be a right for all officers and staff who commit to this unique public service.

We hope this research can empower forces and inspire decision makers to invest in trauma resilience at a time when policing needs it most.

Key findings

Trauma processing techniques are teachable and well received

Making sense of difficult incidents is something that operational police need to get good at so that they can go from one job to the next (and home after) healthily.

A risk roles can be better supported to improve trauma resilience

Little behavioural research on forms of trauma which may be unique to contemporary policing exists – which is why it has to change.

Trauma managements needs improving to address CPTSD, working contion and job quality

Our new evidence base provides the first-ever insight into trauma exposure, impact, and its management in contemporary policing.

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