PTSD rate among prison employees equals that of war veterans

Authored by news.wsu.edu and submitted by mvea
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By Addy Hatch, College of Nursing

Prison employees experience PTSD on par with Iraq and Afghanistan war veterans, a new study from a Washington State University College of Nursing researcher found.

Working conditions in a prison can include regular exposure to violence and trauma, and threats of harm to the workers and their families. Previous studies have shown that prison workers have some of the highest rates of mental illness, sleep disorders and physical health issues of all U.S. workers. But the rate of PTSD among prison workers isn’t well understood.

The new study, “Prison employment and post-traumatic stress disorder: Risk and protective factors,” was conducted by lead investigator Lois James, Ph.D., assistant professor at the WSU College of Nursing, and co-investigator Natalie Todak, assistant professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham. It recently was published in the American Journal of Industrial Medicine and excerpted in Force Science News.

“Prison employees can face some of the toughest working conditions of U.S. workers,” said James, “yet limited evidence exists on the specific risk and protective factors to inform targeted interventions.”

Prison employees work under an almost constant state of threat to their personal safety, and about a quarter of them routinely experience serious threats to themselves or their families.

Almost half have witnessed co-workers being seriously injured by inmates.

More than half have seen an inmate die or have encountered an inmate who recently died.

The vast majority have dealt with inmates who were recently beaten and/or sexually assaulted.

PTSD rates were higher among women, black employees, and employees with more than 10 years of experience. PTSD scores, using criteria from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, didn’t differ based on where the employee worked, such as a minimum versus maximum security facility.

James and Todak note that the research included a small sample of 355 employees of one labor union at the Washington State Department of Corrections, and recommended further study of the issue.

Still, they said their findings suggest the corrections profession could benefit from specific training to promote resilience. They also said issues common to nearly every workplace also can protect prison employees from PTSD, such as having good relationships with supervisors and coworkers, and liking their work assignments.

ZeroToZero on July 14th, 2018 at 16:44 UTC »

I worked in prisons for 10 years and have a few friends that are or were correctional officers. It messes with your head just being inside the walls and mixing with general population it's constant harassment of some sort or other. The atmosphere wears on you most days and the violence you witness can be jarring at first then you just get a bit numb to seeing and go through the motions of a yard going down. You get a feeling when one gang or group is going to make a move and it puts the whole institution on edge for a while and can be tense. The same goes for if there's an escape both leading up to and after. The worst by far are juvenile detention centers those are exhausting.

Elessar535 on July 14th, 2018 at 16:22 UTC »

I would be very interested to see a similar study done with people who work in EMS.

Anovan on July 14th, 2018 at 15:15 UTC »

I get really tired of people assuming that the only people who are "allowed" to have PTSD are combat vets. Trauma happens to people all over the world every day. You don't have to be in a war zone to experience it. I'm glad to see studies like this.