Gender differences in the predictors of police stress
Abstract
Purpose
The research compared the predictors of work‐related stress for policemen and policewomen. Stressors included workplace problems, token status in the organization, low family and coworker support, and community and organizational conditions.
Design/methodology/approach
In 11 police departments, racial and ethnic minorities were oversampled. Of 2,051 officers sampled, 46.2 percent responded. Questions and scales were adapted from prior research on both males and females. Regression analysis revealed the strength of individual predictors of stress, the variance explained by workplace problems, and the additional variance explained by social support, token status, and community and organizational context.
Findings
Workplace problems explained more male's than female's stress. Regardless of gender, the strongest predictor of stress was bias of coworkers, and a weaker predictor was language harassment. Just for males, lack of influence over work and appearance‐related stigmatization were additional predictors. Workplace problems explained gender differences in stress that were related to token status as a female.
Research limitations/implications
The sample was not representative of all police in the USA. Measures of community and organizational characteristics were highly intercorrelated, so they could not be examined separately. Especially, for women, there is a need to identify additional sorts of influence on stress.
Practical implications
Although individual interventions and coping strategies are important for reducing police officer stress, changes in the organizational context also deserve attention. There is a need to develop and test interventions to reduce bias among coworkers, to contain language harassment, and to provide police with an increased sense of control over their work.
Originality/value
The paper focuses on stress within the policing environment.
Keywords
Citation
Morash, M., Kwak, D. and Haarr, R. (2006), "Gender differences in the predictors of police stress", Policing: An International Journal, Vol. 29 No. 3, pp. 541-563. https://doi.org/10.1108/13639510610684755
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2006, Emerald Group Publishing Limited