Dying for the job: police mortality, 1950–2018

2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
John M. Violanti ◽  
Ja K. Gu ◽  
Luenda E. Charles ◽  
Desta Fekedulegn ◽  
Michael E. Andrew

PurposeThis study is a mortality assessment on police officers (68-years, 1950–2018) and includes all causes of death.Design/methodology/approachThe authors investigated 1,853 police deaths (1950–2018) using sources of mortality that included the National Death Index, NY State, and available records from the Buffalo NY police department. Standardized Mortality Ratios were calculated. Death codes were obtained from 8th and 9th International Classification of Disease revisions in accordance with the year of death.FindingsCompared to the US general population, white male police officers from 1950–2018 had elevated mortality rates for some causes of death, including diseases of the circulatory system, malignant neoplasms, cirrhosis of the liver, and mental disorders. Black and female officers had lower mortality rates for all causes of death compared to the general population.Research limitations/implicationsThe findings of elevated risk for chronic disease among police need to be studied in relation to stress, lifestyle, and exposure to chemical and physical agents. There is a special need to further study officers from minority populations as larger samples become available.Practical implicationsThe results of this study will provide police and occupational health practitioners with objective evidence to determine the health impact of work on law enforcement officers.Originality/valueThis study is longest running mortality assessment on police officers ever conducted (1950–2018) and includes white, black, and female officers.

2016 ◽  
Vol 43 (12) ◽  
pp. 2155-2161 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristina Juneblad ◽  
Solbritt Rantapää-Dahlqvist ◽  
Gerd-Marie Alenius

Objective.Recent studies indicate increased cardiovascular (CV) morbidity and mortality in patients with psoriatic arthritis (PsA), but results are inconsistent. This prompted our investigation of the mortality rate, cause of death, and incidence of acute CV events in patients from northern Sweden with PsA.Methods.Patients with established PsA (464) were included. To calculate standardized mortality ratio (SMR) and standardized incidence ratio (SIR) for CV events, data were extracted from the National Causes of Death Register and the National Inpatient Care Register in Sweden, and compared with the general population. The study period was 1995–2011. To study the effect of inflammatory activity, a composite disease activity index (DAI) was used.Results.The SMR (95% CI) for overall mortality and diseases of the circulatory system (International Classification of Diseases, 10th edition; I00-I99) was 1.22 (0.89–1.63) and 1.64 (1.02–2.52), respectively. In regression analysis, DAI was significantly associated with death (OR 1.99, 95% CI 1.41–2.80) when adjusted for age and sex (p < 0.001), and remained significant after stratifying patients into the 2 major causes of death: diseases of the circulatory system and malignant neoplasms. Peripheral and axial disease was associated with death (OR 4.02, 95% CI 1.84–8.84, p < 0.001) compared with peripheral disease only. The SIR (95% CI) for a CV event (myocardial infarction or stroke) was 0.597 (0.40–0.86); this association was only significant in men.Conclusion.Patients with PsA had a small but significant increase in SMR for death due to diseases of the circulatory system compared with the general population. Among patients, death was associated with DAI, as well as axial involvement in combination with peripheral disease, indicating more aggressive disease phenotypes.


Author(s):  
G. I. Tikhonova ◽  
M. S. Bryleva ◽  
T. Yu. Gorchakova

Standardized mortality rates of the male population aged 15-59 in Monchegorsk, where the Kola mining and metallurgical company is located, were higher relative to the Murmansk region and Russia: from diseases of the circulatory system by 34.8% and 52.1%, respectively, from malignant neoplasms by 26.3% and 19.4%, from diseases of the digestive system by 59.0% and 36.3%.


2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 99-104
Author(s):  
Evgenii L. Borschuk ◽  
Dmitrii N. Begun ◽  
Tatyana V. Begun

Objectives - to study the mortality indicators, their dynamics and structure, in the population of the Orenburg region in the period of 2011-2017. Material and methods. The study was conducted using the data from the territorial authority of statistics in the Orenburg region in the period from 2011 to 2017. The analytical, demographic and statistical methods were implemented for the study of the demographic indicators. Results. Cities and municipal settlements of the Orenburg region with high mortality indicators were included in the second and fourth clusters during the cluster analysis. The first and third clusters included cities and municipal settlements with an average mortality. The most favorable position has the Orenburg area with the lowest mortality rate in the region in 2017 - 8.4%. The dynamics of mortality rates among the male and female population tends to decrease, more pronounced dynamics is in men. Though, the male population is characterized by higher mortality rates in all age groups. The leading position among the causes of death is taken by diseases of the circulatory system (46.3% of the total mortality). The second position is occupied by tumors (17.2%), the third - by external causes (8.4%). Mortality from circulatory system diseases and from external causes has reduced. The dynamics of mortality from tumors does not change significantly. The rank of leading causes of death is not identical in the clusters: in the third and fourth clusters, the other causes occupy the second place in the structure of mortality, while tumors occupy the third. Conclusion. In the Orenburg region, the mortality rate is higher than overage in the Russian Federation by 0.9 per 1000 people. The study revealed significant territorial differences in the mortality rates. In general, the mortality among men in all age groups is higher than the mortality of women. The mortality rate from diseases of the circulatory system plays the leading role in the structure of mortality, but has the tendency for decline. Until 2006, the mortality from external causes ranked the second place, now the second place is taken by death from tumors The mortality from external causes is decreasing; mortality from tumors does not change significantly. The obtained results could be used by local authorities in developing the program of public health protection and assessing its effectiveness.


2020 ◽  
Vol 110 ◽  
pp. 447-451 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nayoung Rim ◽  
Bocar Ba ◽  
Roman Rivera

This study provides evidence of racial and gender disparities among police officers by examining a key metric of internal recognition: departmental award nominations. Using a novel dataset on Chicago police officers, we find that black (female) officers are significantly less likely to be nominated compared to their white (male) colleagues, even after controlling for cohort, age, experience, and key policing activity metrics such as arrests, uses of force, and complaints. Further, the discrepancy is likely not a result of statistical discrimination on the part of nominators, as the minority nominations gap grows among higher award percentiles.


1984 ◽  
Vol 145 (4) ◽  
pp. 429-432 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Masterson ◽  
B. O'Shea

SummaryIt has been suggested that schizophrenic patients have a lower risk of cancer than the general population. We therefore investigated the smoking patterns of 100 current chronic schizophrenic in-patients, and the causes of death in 122 recently deceased schizophrenics. We found that schizophrenics are heavy smokers, and that schizophrenics do die from carcinoma of the bronchus. Proportional mortality rates for all malignancies were not significantly lower in schizophrenics than in the general population but there was a significant absence of cancer of the gastro-intestinal tract. Proportional mortality rates for female mammary carcinoma, pneumonia, and suicide were raised, and that for cerebrovascular disease was low. These differences between schizophrenics and the general population warrant further investigation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-99 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henrik Bjarke Vaegter ◽  
Martine Støten ◽  
Siv Laine Silseth ◽  
Annette Erlangsen ◽  
Gitte Handberg ◽  
...  

Abstract Background and aims Almost 20% of the adult population suffers from chronic pain. Chronic pain may be linked to an elevated mortality; however, results from previous studies are inconsistent. Some studies find similar mortality levels in chronic pain patients and pain-free controls while other studies show elevated mortality levels among chronic pain patients, primarily with respect to cancer, diseases of the circulatory and respiratory systems, and suicide. These conflicting results are potentially due to different population samples and different operational definitions of chronic pain. Further research on overall and cause-specific mortality in patients with severe chronic pain is needed to inform clinical practice. The objective of this register-linkage study was to investigate whether patients with severe chronic pain referred to multidisciplinary pain treatment have higher cause-specific mortality rates than the general population. Methods In this register-linkage cohort study, data from 6,142 chronic pain patients (female: n=3,941, male: n=2,201, mean age: 48.2±14.2; range: 16–97 years) attending an interdisciplinary Pain Center in Odense, Denmark from 2005 to 2014 were linked to the Danish Register of Causes of Death. Age and gender standardized mortality ratios (SMRs) with their 95% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated and compared with those of the general population. Data from the general population was extracted from the Danish Register of Causes of Death, and Causes of death were classified according to national Classification of Disease (ICD-10). Results In all, 276 deaths (women: n=152, men: n=124) were observed among the chronic pain patients, and a six-fold higher overall mortality rate was found [SMR: 6.2 (95% CI: 5.5–7.0)] compared with the general population. Elevated cause-specific mortality rates were noted for chronic patients with respect to cancer and neoplasms [4.7 (95% CI: 3.7–5.9)], diseases of the circulatory system [5.7 (95% CI: 4.3–7.3)], diseases of the respiratory system [8.7 (95% CI: 6.2–11.9)], and suicide [7.3 (95% CI: 2.7–15.9)]. Conclusions The overall mortality rate of patients with severe chronic pain in this study was six-fold higher than the rate of the general population in this region. This was reflected in select specific causes of death (cancer and neoplasms, diseases of the circulatory system, diseases of the respiratory system, and suicide). The results are in agreement with previous studies and emphasize the need to understand which factors causally affect this increased mortality allowing for targeted interventions in similar chronic pain populations. Implications Potential reasons for the excess mortality should be adequately addressed by future studies in order to better target this in the management of these patients. The chronic pain population included in this study may have several comorbidities contributing to the increased mortality. To better address these aspects, complete medical profiles are needed in future studies. In addition, implementation of management strategies towards potential risk factors such as poor diet, low levels of physical activity, smoking, and high BMI as well as sleep deprivation and morphine use previously shown associated with having pain may reduce the excess mortality ratio.


Author(s):  
Samantha Riedy ◽  
Drew Dawson ◽  
Desta Fekedulegn ◽  
Michael Andrew ◽  
Bryan Vila ◽  
...  

PurposeThe purpose of this paper is to assess whether shift work, sleep loss and fatigue are related to short-term unplanned absences in policing.Design/methodology/approachN = 367 police officers from the Buffalo Police Department were studied. Day-by-day work and sick leave data were obtained from the payroll. Absenteeism was defined as taking a single sick day on a regularly scheduled workday. Biomathematical models of fatigue (BMMF) predicted officers' sleep–wake behaviors and on-duty fatigue and sleepiness. Prior sleep, fatigue and sleepiness were tested as predictors of absenteeism during the next shift.FindingsA total of 513,666 shifts and 4,868 cases of absenteeism were studied. The odds of absenteeism increased as on-duty fatigue and sleepiness increased and prior sleep decreased. This was particularly evident for swing shift officers and night shift officers who were predicted by BMMF to obtain less sleep and have greater fatigue and sleepiness than day shift officers. The odds of absenteeism were higher for female officers than male officers; this finding was not due to a differential response to sleep loss, fatigue or sleepiness.Practical implicationsAbsenteeism may represent a self-management strategy for fatigue or compensatory behavior to reduced sleep opportunity. Long and irregular work hours that reduce sleep opportunity may be administratively controllable culprits of absenteeism.Originality/valuePolice fatigue has consequences for police officers, departments and communities. BMMF provide a potential tool for predicting and mitigating police fatigue. BMMF were used to investigate the effects of sleep and fatigue on absenteeism.


2011 ◽  
Vol 42 (8) ◽  
pp. 1649-1661 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Dutta ◽  
R. M. Murray ◽  
J. Allardyce ◽  
P. B. Jones ◽  
J. E. Boydell

BackgroundThe excess mortality following first-contact psychosis is well recognized. However, the causes of death in a complete incidence cohort and mortality patterns over time compared with the general population are unknown.MethodAll 2723 patients who presented for the first time with psychosis in three defined catchment areas of the UK in London (1965–2004, n=2056), Nottingham (1997–1999, n=203) and Dumfries and Galloway (1979–1998, n=464) were traced after a mean of 11.5 years follow-up and death certificates were obtained. Data analysis was by indirect standardization.ResultsThe overall standardized mortality ratio (SMR) for first-contact psychosis was 184 [95% confidence interval (CI) 167–202]. Most deaths (84.2%, 374/444) were from natural causes, although suicide had the highest SMR (1165, 95% CI 873–1524). Diseases of the respiratory system and infectious diseases had the highest SMR of the natural causes of death (232, 95% CI 183–291). The risk of death from diseases of the circulatory system was also elevated compared with the general population (SMR 139, 95% CI 117–164) whereas there was no such difference for neoplasms (SMR 111, 95% CI 86–141). There was strong evidence that the mortality gap compared with the general population for all causes of death (p<0.001) and all natural causes (p=0.01) increased over the four decades of the study. There was weak evidence that cardiovascular deaths may be increasing relative to the general population (p=0.07).ConclusionsPeople with first-contact psychosis have an overall mortality risk that is nearly double that of the general population. Most excess deaths are from natural causes. The widening of the mortality gap over the last four decades should be of concern to all clinicians involved in delivering healthcare.


2020 ◽  
Vol 46 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. S17-S18
Author(s):  
Oleguer Plana-Ripoll ◽  
Nanna Weye ◽  
Natalie Momen ◽  
Maria Christensen ◽  
Kim Iburg ◽  
...  

Abstract Background People with mental disorders have increased mortality rates and reduced life expectancies. We recently found that, compared to the general population, men and women with any mental disorder experienced 10 and 7 years, respectively, of life-years lost (LYLs), a new metric to estimate reduced life expectancy that takes into account the age of onset of the disorder. Our aim is to examine changes in mortality rate ratios (MRRs) and LYLs for both external and natural causes over twenty years for a comprehensive range of mental disorders, including schizophrenia spectrum disorder. Methods We conducted a cohort study comprising all 7,369,926 people living in Denmark in 1995–2015. Information on mental disorders and mortality was obtained from national registers. We looked at all mental disorders combined and specific groups of diagnoses as defined by the ICD-10 F-subchapters (substance use disorders, schizophrenia spectrum disorder, mood disorders, neurotic disorders, etc.) and classified causes of death into natural and external causes. We estimated MRRs using Poisson regression models, adjusting for sex and age and including an interaction term with calendar time. Differences in remaining life expectancy after disease diagnosis were estimated as excess LYLs (divided into LYLs due to natural and external causes of death) between those with each disorder and the general Danish population (matched on sex and age) for specific periods separately (1995–1999, 2000–2004, 2005–2009, 2010–2015). Results Over the period of observation, mortality rates decreased for those with any diagnosed mental disorder, as well as for those without a diagnosis. Despite these improvements, the MRRs between the two groups increased from 2.38 (95% CI: 2.32–2.44) in 1995 to 2.60 (95% CI: 2.55–2.65) in 2015. For external causes of death, MRRs decreased from 6.64 (95% CI: 6.15–7.17) to 5.27 (95% CI: 4.87–5.70), while MRRs for natural causes increased from 2.19 (95% CI: 2.14–2.25) to 2.52 (95% CI: 2.47–2.56). Remaining life expectancy after disease diagnosis increased 4.6 years from 32.0 to 36.6 years; however, remaining life expectancy increased also in the matched general population of same age and sex by 3.2 years (from 41.7 to 44.9 years). The life expectancy gap between the two periods was therefore shortened by 1.4 years; excess LYLs were 9.7 years in 1995–1999 (5.8/3.8 years due to natural/external causes) and 8.3 years in 2010–2015 (6.6/1.7 years due to natural/external causes). When looking at specific mental disorders, the life expectancy gap was reduced for mood disorders (0.8 years), neurotic disorders (1.7 years), and personality disorders (0.9 years); remained similar for schizophrenia spectrum disorder and substance use disorders; and increased for organic disorders (1.1 years). Discussion Mortality rates for people experiencing mental disorders decreased from 1995 to 2015. However, for natural causes of death, those with mental disorders did not reflect the benefits seen in the general population. Consequently, life lost due to natural causes increased. Overall, life expectancy increased an additional 1.4 years for those with mental disorders compared with the general population, thus reducing the gap. Nevertheless, for some disorders e.g. schizophrenia spectrum disorder and substance use disorders, life expectancy gap did not change. These findings support the hypothesis that service improvements have reduced mortality due to suicide and accidents, but similar benefits are not apparent in natural causes of death, which suggests that interventions related to promoting a healthier lifestyle and optimizing the general medical care of those with mental disorders warrants added investment.


Author(s):  
Danielle Maya Eadens ◽  
Ann Cranston-Gingras ◽  
Errol Dupoux ◽  
Daniel Wayne Eadens

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine police officer perceptions about persons with intellectual disabilities. Design/methodology/approach – In this study, 188 officers from three police districts in the Southeast USA were surveyed using a modified Social Distance Questionnaire. Findings – Results indicate that the majority of police officers surveyed had little or no training with regard to disabilities and that most are willing to interact socially with individuals with intellectual disabilities. Further, this study found that female officers had significantly greater positive attitudes toward individuals with intellectual disabilities than male respondents and that white respondents were more knowledgeable about these individuals than those from minority backgrounds. Research limitations/implications – While these results are significant, it should be noted that the number of female and minority participants was relatively low. Practical implications – The paper includes recommendations for professional development for police officer and criminal justice training programs. Social implications – As individuals with developmental and intellectual disabilities are increasingly integrated into society, their vulnerability to mishandling by the criminal justice system and police officers intensifies. This paper allows police officers and those within the field of criminal justice an opportunity to examine perceptions as they seek to understand how police and general societal perceptions impact the way that people interact with persons with intellectual disabilities. Originality/value – This paper fulfills a need to examine attitudes of police officers toward citizens with intellectual disabilities in the communities in which they live. These attitudes often affect the way that police officers interact with citizens and identify additional training needs to better prepare officers for diverse individuals they may will encounter.


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