为什么警察拒绝心理咨询?论警察亚文化的必要变革

Noel Otu, Ntiense Otu
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摘要

本文回顾了警察亚文化的概念,并探讨了其在管理和接受治疗的压力相关伤害中的作用。特别是,我们研究了这种亚文化中附着在治疗上的耻辱的影响。占主导地位的警察亚文化的持续存在仍然是警察寻求治疗压力相关疾病的重大障碍。从历史上看,亚文化一直拒绝承认由于频繁暴露于与工作有关的创伤而导致的职业和/或组织压力相关损伤需要治疗。许多警察管理人员仍然沉浸在亚文化中,并抵制改变,这导致了一种不欢迎寻求或接受治疗的警察的氛围。本研究借鉴了定性和定量研究,并修改了标签理论,以确定警察亚文化中耻辱的来源。这篇论文回顾了警察拒绝治疗的原因,讨论了污名化和贴标签的问题,并认为有必要改变警察亚文化,至少在一定程度上要确保行政人员支持治疗和警察的健康。据透露,对寻求和接受治疗的军官的污名化直接导致其他人拒绝/拒绝治疗。该研究建议各部门在个人、管理和组织层面处理与压力咨询相关的标签和污名化亚文化过程,以改变警察亚文化,提高警察的职业健康和安全水平。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Why Do the Police Reject Counseling? An Examination of Necessary Changes to Police Subculture
This paper reviews the concept of police subculture and examines its role in the management and acceptance of treatment for stress-related injury. In particular, we examine the impact of stigma that attaches to treatment within this subculture. The persistence of the dominant police subculture remains a significant obstacle to officers seeking treatment for stress-related illnesses. The subculture has historically resisted acknowledging the need for treatment in response to the occupational and/or organizational stress-related injury that results from frequent exposure to work-related trauma. Many police administrators are still embedded within and resist changes to the subculture, which results in an atmosphere that is unwelcoming to officers seeking or accepting treatment. This study draws on both qualitative and quantitative studies and modifies labeling theory to determine the sources of stigma involved in the police subculture. The paper reviews the reasons why officers refuse treatment, discusses the issue of stigmatization and labeling, and argues for the need to change police subculture, at least in part by ensuring that administrators support treatment and good health for officers. It is revealed that the stigmatization of officers who seek and receive treatment directly results in others’ refusal/rejection of it. The study recommends that departments address the subcultural processes of labeling and stigmatization associated with stress counseling at the individual, management, and organizational levels to bring about a shift in police subculture and improve the level of occupational health and safety for officers on the force.
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