<p>This exploratory study investigates the relationship between resilience, burnout, and empathy among law enforcement officers, utilizing the Professional Quality of Life measure, Interpersonal Reactivity Index, and Revised-Illinois Rape Myth Acceptance Scale. Through multivariate and mediation analyses, the research provides nuanced insights into how burnout, secondary trauma, and compassion satisfaction influence emotional and psychological outcomes for officers. Additionally, qualitative, open-ended items are used to gather individualized responses regarding hardships and coping mechanisms used by officers. Resilience emerges as a critical factor, positively correlating with empathy and inversely with burnout. Resilience shows a direct negative relationship with personal distress, indicating its protective effects. A mediation analysis further demonstrates that resilience partially mitigates burnout’s impact on perspective taking and empathetic concern. Qualitative data underscore the challenges officers face, including frustration with agency support and public interactions. The findings suggest that enhancing resilience through targeted interventions, combined with addressing organizational shortcomings, could improve officers’ well-being and effectiveness.</p>

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Investigating Resilience, Burnout, and Empathy: An Exploratory Study of Small City Police Officers

  • Ashley K. Fansher,
  • Jessica C. Fleming,
  • Sara Zedaker

摘要

This exploratory study investigates the relationship between resilience, burnout, and empathy among law enforcement officers, utilizing the Professional Quality of Life measure, Interpersonal Reactivity Index, and Revised-Illinois Rape Myth Acceptance Scale. Through multivariate and mediation analyses, the research provides nuanced insights into how burnout, secondary trauma, and compassion satisfaction influence emotional and psychological outcomes for officers. Additionally, qualitative, open-ended items are used to gather individualized responses regarding hardships and coping mechanisms used by officers. Resilience emerges as a critical factor, positively correlating with empathy and inversely with burnout. Resilience shows a direct negative relationship with personal distress, indicating its protective effects. A mediation analysis further demonstrates that resilience partially mitigates burnout’s impact on perspective taking and empathetic concern. Qualitative data underscore the challenges officers face, including frustration with agency support and public interactions. The findings suggest that enhancing resilience through targeted interventions, combined with addressing organizational shortcomings, could improve officers’ well-being and effectiveness.