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Journal Article

Citation

Augustin D, Fagan TJ. Psychol. Serv. 2011; 8(3): 166-177.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, Educational Publishing Foundation)

DOI

10.1037/a0024104

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Law enforcement personnel routinely face various critical incidents in the course of their workday including confrontations with irate, violent, and/or mentally challenged individuals. While less frequent, law enforcement personnel also are called in response to hostage incidents, barricaded subject incidents, and attempted suicide/suicide by cop incidents. Over the past 30 years, response strategies utilized by law enforcement personnel have been evolving and have been influenced by mental health professionals. This article briefly reviews the histories of Critical Incident Teams (CITs) and Crisis Negotiation Teams (CNTs), discusses the roles of mental health professionals in the development and continuing evolution of CITs and CNTs, presents some of the obstacles to mental health involvement with law enforcement, and highlights areas in need of more empirical research. © 2011 American Psychological Association.


Language: en

Keywords

Law enforcement; Critical incidents; Crisis negotiation

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