This mixed methods study examines emotional wellbeing and cognitive appraisals among law enforcement exposed to child sexual abuse material.
In this study, researchers used an exploratory sequential mixed method design integrating quantitative and qualitative methodologies to examine emotional wellbeing and cognitive appraisals among law enforcement exposed to child sexual abuse material. Results indicate that the cognitive appraisals of police investigators and forensic examiners working with child sexually explicit material (CSEM) may impact the level of distress they experience and its impact on holistic wellbeing. Cognitive appraisals of law enforcement who investigate CSEM can be seen on two main axes: emotional vs cognitive and victim vs system. Cognitive-based and system-focused appraisals were associated with better wellbeing. Implications for officer wellness and future research are discussed. Survey data were collected from 500 police investigators, forensic examiners, and others connected with the criminal justice system from across the United States; 258 of them also provided in-depth qualitative data. A principal components analysis uncovered initial components and latent probabilities, which were subsequently enriched with qualitative data coded using a grounded-theory approach. (Published Abstract Provided)
Downloads
Similar Publications
- A Self-assessment Tool for Helping Identify Police Burnout Among Investigators of Child Sexual Abuse Material
- Practices for Law Enforcement Interviews of Potential Human Trafficking Victims: A Scoping Review
- Using Scammers’ Data to Estimate the Impact and Importance of Preventing Repeat Mail Fraud Victimization