Stress plays an important role in human life. Under normal conditions it has a favorable influence. However, constant pathological stress can be harmful. The results can be depression, leading sometimes to alcohol and/or drug abuse, or suicide. Some specific groups of society are affected by stress more frequently and more severely. One of these groups is the police. This article aims to identify key psychosocial problems which police officers of Lithuania are encountering in an independent post‐communist state. The common social situation in Lithuania is briefly reviewed and the main stress factors which influence police officers are evaluated using a specially developed Lithuanian University of Law Questionnaire (LULQ). The stress factors having the greatest negative effect are the administrative problems of police work, family problems, and an ineffective criminal justice system. The results are compared with similar studies carried out in the USA. The necessity of amendments in LULQ and survey design, as well as the development of a program of police officer psychophysiological “abilitation” and rehabilitation, are discussed.
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1 September 2001
Research Article|
September 01 2001
Some psychosocial problems of police officers in Lithuania Available to Purchase
G. Zukauskas;
G. Zukauskas
Lithuanian University of Law, Vilnius, Lithuania
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K. Dapsys;
K. Dapsys
Republican Vilnius Psychiatric Hospital, Vilnius, Lithuania
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E. Jasmontaite;
E. Jasmontaite
Lithuanian University of Law, Vilnius, Lithuania, and
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J. Susinskas
J. Susinskas
Lithuania Academy of Sciences, Institute of Mathematics, Vilnius, Lithuania
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Online ISSN: 1758-695X
Print ISSN: 1363-951X
© MCB UP Limited
2001
Policing: An International Journal (2001) 24 (3): 301–309.
Citation
Zukauskas G, Dapsys K, Jasmontaite E, Susinskas J (2001), "Some psychosocial problems of police officers in Lithuania". Policing: An International Journal, Vol. 24 No. 3 pp. 301–309, doi: https://doi.org/10.1108/EUM0000000005856
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