Unlocking deflection: The role of supervisor support in police officer willingness to refer people who inject drugs to harm reduction services

Original research
by
Marotta, Phillip L. et al

Release Date

2023

Geography

Mexico

Language of Resource

English

Full Text Available

No

Open Access / OK to Reproduce

No

Peer Reviewed

Yes

Objective

We hypothesized that officers with more positive attitudes and practices would be more likely to report the perceived support of their supervisors.

Findings/Key points

Officers who referred people to social services were more likely and officers who broke syringes were less likely to report perceived supervisor support compared to officers who did not engage in these practices. Officers who believed: MOUD reduced criminal activity, “referring people who use drugs to social services is part of my job”, and “laws that treat addiction as a public health problem make my job easier”, were more likely to report perceived supervisor support. Beliefs that drug addiction is a disease, laws that treat addiction as a public health problem make their job easier, and talking to other law enforcement officers about infectious diseases were not significantly associated with perceived supervisor support.

Design/methods

Data includes a sample of 1227 police officers who completed Project ESCUDO, a police education training program in Tijuana, Mexico.

Keywords

Harm reduction
Legal system/law enforcement