How LE & others deal with the job of killing and death
Quote:
\It might be interesting to compare and contrast how soldiers deal with the job of killing with how medics deal with the job of preventing death.* For example, a reverse triage situation presents a particularly difficult combination of acts of omission and commission.
*As an aside, many career park rangers have come upon multiple mangled corpses and have unsuccessfully administered CPR multiple times over the courses of their careers. Killologists should really talk to them at length about these sorts of things.
That is a very interesting question. I wonder if anyone has ever done any good studies on this among, say, EMTs?
How LE & others deal with the job of killing and death
Moderator's Note
This is a spin-off from a thread 'How soldiers deal with the job of killing', which of late has taken a surprising turn and started to talk about the parallel and separate experience of LE and other public servants deal with the job of killing and dealing with death.
One copper's recollections
In my early service I frequently encountered death, nearly always what we called a 'sudden death' and with two exceptions they were senior citizens who died at home. The one exception lingered for a while, a police retiree collapsed in the road and I was told to stay with the body and widow till family arrived a few hours later. In the second case a man in his 50's collapsed at work, we attended as it was thought to be an industrial accident and we then found his wife to tell her the bad news.
Dealing with death then became quite routine. Calm people down, get a relative in, get details for a coroner's report, offer very basic assistance and exit.
Child deaths, especially in road accidents, are known to be bad. Thankfully I never dealt with one.
Never came close to killing anyone and I can now only recall one incident where someone was perceived as wanting to kill the police - in a prolonged vehicle pursuit. That lead to a flashback moment with episodes of my life speeding past and then gone - the "bad guy" being caught minutes later.
Violent deaths in my career were rare, strangely I can recall those colleagues who committed suicide more clearly.
Apart from the routine, "canteen" humour had a part and putting distance between your life at work and life at home. I'm hard pressed to think of a single debriefing after an incident and was only offered counselling after a police suicide - which I was unaware of having just joined his ex-team.
Way back in 1974, when the B'ham Pub Bombings happened, with twenty-five dead and scores injured - when I joined in 1980 it was often referred to. We also knew one officer left under the strain and rejoined ten years later - he was rarely on the streets and was "looked after".
I have asked two ex-RUC veterans for their comments.
The Worst EMT Moment in My Dataset
An EMT unit got called to an auto accident. The driver who was high (pot and booze) ran off the road, went airborne and took down a power pole. One EMT took care of the driver (who survived); while the other EMT (my friend) went over to a body that was pretty banged up (dead). When he rolled him over, the body was his younger brother. The kid had been hitchhiking to get home. I represented the family in the wrongful death action, which settled before trial.
Regards
Mike
Reliving Horror and Faint Hope at Massacre Site
A NYT article based on interviews with local LE @ Newtown, Conn:http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/29/ny...pagewanted=all
I still have to admit, I do struggle
The title comes from a closing comment in 'Life of a Police Officer: Medically and Psychologically Ruinous' in The Atlantic:http://m.theatlantic.com/health/arch...uinous/284324/
Quote:
In 2012, an unprecedented study of 464 police officers, published in the International Journal of Emergency Mental Health linked officers’ stress with increased levels of sleep disorders, Hodgkin's lymphoma, brain cancer, heart disease, diabetes, and suicide.
Other studies have found that between 7 and 19 percent of active duty police have PTSD, while MRIs of police officers’ brains have found a connection between experiencing trauma and a reduction in areas that play roles in emotional and cognitive decision-making, memory, fear, and stress regulation.
For once, on a quick scan, the comments have some value.
Cheshire Police officer crashed patrol car into HQ gates
I spotted this story at the time and was frankly baffled. The BBC has a short post-court report:http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-32114878
Today via a policing blogger is the officer's own explanation for his PTSD, dating back to service in the army in Iraq. In places it is rightly critical of his immediate supervisors and the personal impact of policing when budgets have been cut by 20%:https://beatstigma.wordpress.com/2015/04/09/about-me/
Terror and rage: what makes a mass murderer different to a terrorist?
An interesting article by Jeff Sparrow, the author of a 2009 book 'Killing: Misadventures in Violence', which covers many current issues and has several links:https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/aug/04/terror-and-rage-what-makes-a-mass-murderer-different-to-a-terrorist?
Two book reviews via Amazon:https://www.amazon.com/product-revie...owViewpoints=1