Secondary traumatic stress among police officers – the relationship with personality and ruminations

Autor

Słowa kluczowe:

exposure to secondary trauma, secondary traumatic stress, personality, ruminations, police officers

Abstrakt

Background

Like many professionals who work with victims of trauma, police officers may experience negative consequences expressed in the form of secondary traumatic stress (STS) symptoms. The study aim was to establish the relationship between personality, ruminations (intrusive and deliberate) and secondary traumatic stress symptoms, including the mediating role of ruminations, in a group of police officers exposed to secondary trauma.

Participants and procedure

A group of 235 police officers working, at least partly, with trauma victims were surveyed. The age of the participants ranged from 30 to 60 years (M = 40.79, SD = 3.96). Three questionnaires were used: the Secondary Traumatic Stress Inventory, the NEO Five-Factor Inventory and the EventRelated Rumination Inventory.

Results

The results demonstrate a rather low level of STS among police officers. Ruminations, particularly intrusive ones, were more strongly connected with symptoms of STS than personality traits. Neuroticism correlated more strongly with STS than other personality traits, and extraversion was not connected with any negative effects of secondary trauma exposure. The conducted analysis confirmed that ruminations act as mediators in the relationship between neuroticism and STS.

Conclusions

Although the police officers working with trauma victims revealed low levels of STS symptoms, it is nevertheless advisable to ameliorate, if not prevent, them. Interventions should aim to expand the competencies in coping with trauma, including reducing the tendency to ruminate about the traumatic events experienced by clients.

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Opublikowane

2023-12-15

Jak cytować

Ogińska-Bulik, N., Bąk, G., & Michalska, P. (2023). Secondary traumatic stress among police officers – the relationship with personality and ruminations. Current Issues in Personality Psychology, 11(4), 259–268. Pobrano z https://czasopisma.bg.ug.edu.pl/index.php/CIiPP/article/view/10468

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