Police officers are 5x more likely to kill themselves than to be killed by homicide. Nearly 25% of officers leave their department within the first 18-36 months on the job. Long and often rotating shifts, threats of violence, increased need for hypervigilance, and a lack of public support are creating chronic stress in the police force, leading to negative coping behaviors.
When law enforcement officers are experiencing a high volume of stress, either at particular points in their shift or over a prolonged period of time in their careers, their ability to fundamentally hear, see, and make complicated decisions is significantly diminished. Police officer shooting accuracy, arrest and self-defense, and communication all decrease when stress levels are high. The same study shared that officers fired more often on suspects that had already surrendered in high-stress situations.
Of those who experienced force when coming into contact with police, nearly 51% perceive the use of “excessive force.” Municipalities spend hard-earned tax-payers dollars on settlements between police officers and community members every year for these very interactions. Three cities alone (New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles) have each spent an average of $83MM on police-related settlements every year for the past 10 years.