Badge of Life IJEMH Summary

Police Suicide Numbers and Rate | 2010 Police Suicide Statistics from Badge of Life | AA for Police Officers | Badge of Life IJEMH Summary | police suicide | Resources for law enforcement suicide survivors | Failure of Police Suicide Programs | Angry Cops--Why? | Police Suicide, Just a "bad choice?" | Police PTSD: An Emotional AND Physical Injury | No such thing as a routine stop for CHP | The Secret of Eddie Adamson | The Trial and Judgment of Sergeant Edward Adamson | POLICE SUICIDE, WHERE IS THE PIPER? | We Are Killing our own Police Officers--by Suicide | Free Drug and Alcohol Assessment | Mask of Contentment: Police PTSD and Suicide | Trauma on Trauma: From Civilian to Military Combat | Is There Happiness in Police Work? | Chasing Devils--Cops and Alcoholics Anonymous

International Journal of Emergency Mental Health,  Vol. 12, No. 2, pp. 95-102   © 2010 Chevron Publishing  ISSN 1522-4821

 

For a copy:  http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21138153 (Law enforcement contact badgeoflife@gmail.com)

 

The Badge of Life Psychological Survival for

Police Officers Program

 

 

Richard L. Levenson, Jr.

The Badge of Life Psychological Survival

for Police Officers Program

 

Andrew F. O’Hara

The Badge of Life Psychological Survival

for Police Officers Program

 

Ron Clark, Sr.

The Badge of Life Psychological Survival

for Police Officers Program

 

 

 

 

Abstract: Worldwide, there is no more consistently stressful job than that of the police officer. In the United States, police officers are more likely to die by suicide than by any type of criminal or criminal activity.

 

This article discusses the Badge of Life Psychological Survival for Police Officers Program (BOL), founded in 2008, with the goal of developing an effective police officer suicide primary and secondary prevention program. Such a program is not a regular entity within the majority of accredited law enforcement agencies.

 

Along with standard suicide prevention protocols typically used in other programs, an Emotional Self- Care Program (ESC) was designed to focus on the officer’s ability and responsibility to care for his own emotional well-being.  The model relies on teaching the factor of resilience as a significant component of stress-resistance (Everly, Welzant, & Jacobson, 2008).  Selected for their credibility and trust level, peer support officers conduct the actual annual training workshops, set the example, and encourage involvement at all levels. 

 

A “cradle-to-the-grave” program (i.e., rookies to retirees), ESC calls upon departments to begin teaching their personnel about the effects of job-related stress and trauma while they are still in the academy, emphasizing the importance of voluntary, confidential “annual mental health checks.”

 

Representatives of BOL now lecture regularly across the United States and Canada.  All consultations, lectures, educational and training workshops, services, and referrals are free, as are original training materials developed and approved by the BOL Board of Directors. 

 

 

[International Journal of Emergency Mental Health, 2010, 12(2), pp. 95-102].

 

 

Badge of Life
Return to Badge of Life