To date, there is little international data on depression and anxiety among policeofficers apart from studies carried out after an attack or natural disaster. At thenational level, no mental health data exists for police officers, apart from those fromthe Paris attacks, and the work of investigators after the Strasbourg attack (article inpress).During the covid crisis, in Alsace, the police, like the rest of the population, took thefull brunt of the pandemic. The police, however, are part of essential professions andhave not been confined, but on the contrary, have remained in contact with thepopulation, in particular to carry out traffic controls. Studies published to date showvarying mental health outcomes for essential occupations during the pandemic.The investigators hypothesize that the police officers had a feeling of being moreexposed and that their mental health could be affected. For this it was decided tocompare two populations of departments of similar size, but with different exposure tothe pandemic: Bas Rhin and Hérault French departments
Not Provided
Inclusion Criteria:
- Any major agent in office in June 2020 of the national police of the Bas Rhin
department, and Hérault
- Supported between June and September 2020
- Subject not opposing, after information, the reuse of their data for the purposes of
this research
Exclusion Criteria:
- Subject having expressed his opposition to his data being reused for study purposes
Service de Pathologie Professionnelle - Médecine du Travail - CHU de Strasbourg - France
Strasbourg, France
Not Provided