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Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) training and impact on mental illness and substance use-related stigma among law enforcement

Limited empirical data and research exists about stigmatizing attitudes and perceptions held by law enforcement officers towards persons with mental illness and substance use issues. Pre- and post-training survey data from 92 law enforcement personnel who attended a 40-hour Crisis Intervention Team...

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Autores principales: Nick, Gilbert A., Williams, Sharifa, Lekas, Helen-Maria, Pahl, Kerstin, Blau, Chloe, Kamin, Don, Fuller-Lewis, Crystal
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9949319/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36844168
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dadr.2022.100099
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author Nick, Gilbert A.
Williams, Sharifa
Lekas, Helen-Maria
Pahl, Kerstin
Blau, Chloe
Kamin, Don
Fuller-Lewis, Crystal
author_facet Nick, Gilbert A.
Williams, Sharifa
Lekas, Helen-Maria
Pahl, Kerstin
Blau, Chloe
Kamin, Don
Fuller-Lewis, Crystal
author_sort Nick, Gilbert A.
collection PubMed
description Limited empirical data and research exists about stigmatizing attitudes and perceptions held by law enforcement officers towards persons with mental illness and substance use issues. Pre- and post-training survey data from 92 law enforcement personnel who attended a 40-hour Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) training was used to investigate training-related changes in mental illness stigma and substance use stigma. Training participant's mean age was 38.35 ± 9.50 years, majority white non-Hispanic race/ethnicity (84.2%), male gender (65.2%), and reported job category as road patrol (86.9%). Pre-training, 76.1% endorsed at least one stigmatizing attitude towards people with mental illness, and 83.7% held a stigmatizing attitude towards those with substance use problems. Poisson regression revealed that working road patrol (RR=0.49, p<0.05), awareness of community resources (RR=0.66, p<0.05), and higher levels of self-efficacy (RR=0.92, p<0.05) were associated with lower mental illness stigma pre-training. Knowledge of communication strategies (RR=0.65, p<0.05) was associated with lower pre-training substance use stigma. Post-training, improvement in knowledge of community resources and increases in self-efficacy were significantly associated with decreases in both mental illness and substance use stigma. These findings highlight the existence of stigma related to both mental illness and substance use pre-training suggesting the need for implicit and explicit bias training prior to the start of active law enforcement duty. These data are consistent with prior reports indicating CIT trainings as a path to address mental illness and substance use stigma. Further research on effects of stigmatizing attitudes and additional stigma-specific training content is warranted.
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spelling pubmed-99493192023-02-23 Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) training and impact on mental illness and substance use-related stigma among law enforcement Nick, Gilbert A. Williams, Sharifa Lekas, Helen-Maria Pahl, Kerstin Blau, Chloe Kamin, Don Fuller-Lewis, Crystal Drug Alcohol Depend Rep Full Length Report Limited empirical data and research exists about stigmatizing attitudes and perceptions held by law enforcement officers towards persons with mental illness and substance use issues. Pre- and post-training survey data from 92 law enforcement personnel who attended a 40-hour Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) training was used to investigate training-related changes in mental illness stigma and substance use stigma. Training participant's mean age was 38.35 ± 9.50 years, majority white non-Hispanic race/ethnicity (84.2%), male gender (65.2%), and reported job category as road patrol (86.9%). Pre-training, 76.1% endorsed at least one stigmatizing attitude towards people with mental illness, and 83.7% held a stigmatizing attitude towards those with substance use problems. Poisson regression revealed that working road patrol (RR=0.49, p<0.05), awareness of community resources (RR=0.66, p<0.05), and higher levels of self-efficacy (RR=0.92, p<0.05) were associated with lower mental illness stigma pre-training. Knowledge of communication strategies (RR=0.65, p<0.05) was associated with lower pre-training substance use stigma. Post-training, improvement in knowledge of community resources and increases in self-efficacy were significantly associated with decreases in both mental illness and substance use stigma. These findings highlight the existence of stigma related to both mental illness and substance use pre-training suggesting the need for implicit and explicit bias training prior to the start of active law enforcement duty. These data are consistent with prior reports indicating CIT trainings as a path to address mental illness and substance use stigma. Further research on effects of stigmatizing attitudes and additional stigma-specific training content is warranted. Elsevier 2022-09-29 /pmc/articles/PMC9949319/ /pubmed/36844168 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dadr.2022.100099 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Full Length Report
Nick, Gilbert A.
Williams, Sharifa
Lekas, Helen-Maria
Pahl, Kerstin
Blau, Chloe
Kamin, Don
Fuller-Lewis, Crystal
Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) training and impact on mental illness and substance use-related stigma among law enforcement
title Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) training and impact on mental illness and substance use-related stigma among law enforcement
title_full Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) training and impact on mental illness and substance use-related stigma among law enforcement
title_fullStr Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) training and impact on mental illness and substance use-related stigma among law enforcement
title_full_unstemmed Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) training and impact on mental illness and substance use-related stigma among law enforcement
title_short Crisis Intervention Team (CIT) training and impact on mental illness and substance use-related stigma among law enforcement
title_sort crisis intervention team (cit) training and impact on mental illness and substance use-related stigma among law enforcement
topic Full Length Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9949319/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36844168
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.dadr.2022.100099
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