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面对心理健康系统的不足,我们能对警察抱有什么期望?来自芝加哥警察的定性见解。

What can we expect of police in the face of deficient mental health systems? Qualitative insights from Chicago police officers.

机构信息

Department of Criminal Justice, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, USA.

Helen Bader School of Social Welfare, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee, WI, USA.

出版信息

J Psychiatr Ment Health Nurs. 2021 Feb;28(1):28-42. doi: 10.1111/jpm.12691. Epub 2020 Sep 29.

DOI:10.1111/jpm.12691
PMID:32966680
Abstract

WHAT IS KNOWN ON THE SUBJECT?: People with serious mental illnesses are overrepresented in the criminal justice system. Interventions such as Crisis Intervention Teams and Co-responder Teams may improve police officers' ability to provide effective response. There is still a gap in our knowledge of the nature of the situations officers are responding to and their perceptions of what is needed for effective response. WHAT THIS PAPER ADDS TO EXISTING KNOWLEDGE?: This paper provides insight into officer perceptions and experiences of the mental health-related calls they respond to involving youth, adults and families. Officers often refer to people in crisis as having "gone off meds" but also recognize more complex factors at the individual level (e.g., co-occurring issues), family level (challenges of caring for a loved one with mental illness) and community level (deficiencies in health and social resources to address long-term unmet needs). Deficiencies in the resources needed to address the unmet needs of people and their families frustrate officers' desires to make a difference and effect long-term outcomes. WHAT ARE THE IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE?: Findings underscore the need for cities and communities to develop alternatives to emergency departments which, in the long term, may provide the best hope for reducing the reliance on police as mental health interventionists. Formal collaborations between the law enforcement community and the mental health nursing community could be focused towards this end. Findings provoke the larger question of what should "count" as good police work in the face of deficient community health systems. Practitioners should consider the distinction between police effectiveness and "whole system" effectiveness. Police officers could be held to account for "principled encounters" that are resolved in ways that reduce immediate harm, avoid stigma and advance procedural justice, but the full impact of their effects is contingent on the capacity of the wider system to do its job. Mental health nurses are well positioned to assist with officer training and provide support to officers responding to mental health-related situations. ABSTRACT: Introduction Data on fatal outcomes of police encounters, combined with evidence on the criminalization of people with mental illnesses, reveal a grave need to improve outcomes for individuals with mental illnesses who come into contact with police. Current efforts are hampered by a lack of in-depth knowledge about the nature of nature and context of these encounters. Aim/Question Building on previous findings from a larger study on the nature and outcomes of mental health-related encounters with police in Chicago, this paper examines officer perspectives on the unmet needs of individuals and their families and the ways in which the mental health and social system environment constrain officers' abilities to be responsive to them. Methods Findings are drawn from qualitative data produced through 36 "ride-alongs" with police officers. Field researchers conducted open-ended observations of police work during routine shifts and carried out interviews with officers-according to a ride-along question guide-during periods of inactivity or between calls for service to ask about experiences of mental health-related calls. Field notes describing their observations and ride-along interviews were analysed inductively using a combination of open and focused coding. Results Officers responded to a variety of mental health-related calls revealing complex, unmet needs at individual and family levels. A common theme related to officers' perceptions that "going off meds," combined with other situational factors, resulted in police being involved in behavioural health situations. The data also revealed broader aspects of the health and social system that, in officers' minds, constrain their ability to effect positive outcomes for people and their families, especially in the long term. Discussion Findings beg the larger question of what it is we, as a society, should expect of police in the handling of mental health-related calls, given their concerns with the wider health and social service system that they experience as deficient. At the same time, the view that "going off meds" is a common trigger of mental health-related events should be interpreted with care, as it may signal or perhaps serve as a shorthand for more complex health and social needs that could be obscured by a pharmacological or medicalized perspective on mental illness. This is an important area of future inquiry for research at the intersection of policing and mental health nursing. Implications for practice The contribution of police to the wellness and recovery of people and their families is constrained by the ability of the community health and social service system to do its job. A wave of new initiatives designed to enhance the interface between police and the medical community holds out hope for alleviating officers' concerns about whether they can work in tandem with the rest of the system to make a difference. For now, we suggest that what we can expect of police is to implement "principled encounters" that ensure public safety while achieving harm reduction, self-determination and the reduction of stigma. Mental health nurses are well positioned to assist with officer training and provide support to officers responding to mental health-related situations. However, the fields of policing and nursing practice may not yet fully understand the individual, family and community dynamics driving calls for police service. The notion of "gone off meds" should be interrogated as a potential trope that obscures a whole-of-person approach and whole-system approach to mental health crisis response and care.

摘要

已知领域

患有严重精神疾病的人在刑事司法系统中的比例过高。干预措施,如危机干预小组和共同响应小组,可以提高警察提供有效应对的能力。我们仍然缺乏对警察应对的情况性质以及他们对有效应对所需条件的认识。本文的贡献:本文深入了解了警察对涉及青少年、成年人和家庭的心理健康相关呼叫的看法和经验。警察经常将处于危机中的人称为“停药”,但也认识到个人层面(例如,共病问题)、家庭层面(照顾患有精神疾病的亲人的挑战)和社区层面(解决长期未满足需求的卫生和社会资源不足)更复杂的因素。缺乏解决人员及其家庭未满足需求所需的资源,挫败了警察改善状况和产生长期效果的愿望。对实践的影响:研究结果强调城市和社区需要开发替代紧急部门的方案,从长远来看,这可能为减少对警察作为心理健康干预者的依赖提供最佳希望。执法社区和精神健康护理社区之间可以建立正式合作关系,以实现这一目标。研究结果引发了一个更大的问题,即在社区卫生系统存在缺陷的情况下,什么应该“算作”良好的警察工作。从业者应考虑警察有效性和“整体系统”有效性之间的区别。可以要求警察对以减少即时伤害、避免污名化和推进程序正义的方式解决的“有原则的遭遇”负责,但他们的影响的全部影响取决于更广泛系统履行职责的能力。精神健康护士非常适合协助警察培训并为应对心理健康相关情况的警察提供支持。

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