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Recommendations for Implementation
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a.
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Provide
at least two hours of new skills training regarding mental health issues
to all law enforcement personnel who come into contact with people with mental
illness.
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In every jurisdiction, a lead training official or a
training development committee is likely to identify law enforcement personnel
who interact regularly with people with mental illness but have received little
or no meaningful training on this subject. These staff, who have already met
their recruit training requirements but are not prepared to take refresher
courses during in-service training sessions, need new skills training. Recipients of this training should include
call takers and dispatchers, front desk personnel, new hires, and patrol
officers, as well as some detectives, drug-enforcement officers or others. Depending on the size and needs of a
particular jurisdiction, it may be necessary to train additional personnel not
covered in these categories, such as communications officers, or other civilian
personnel.
New skills training should occur at the outset of any new
departmental initiative regarding mental illness. The first goal of this
training is to teach department personnel and affiliated staff to recognize
signs of mental illness so they can respond accordingly. The purpose of this training is not to
enable these line staff to be diagnosticians; rather, officers and staff should
emerge from this training capable of identifying observable behaviors that
might point to the existence of mental illness. Furthermore, officers should be encouraged to consider how a
potential mental illness may have contributed to an incident.
The second goal of this training is to teach officers and
staff to stabilize and de-escalate the situation, while conveying an attitude
of respect for people with mental illness and their families. They must understand relevant statutes and
how to respond to not escalate the problem while a response is developed. By helping personnel to understand how they
may inadvertently use language or take actions that stigmatize mental illness,
trainers can also teach police personnel to change actions that may previously
have been viewed as disrespectful. To
this end, the direct involvement of consumers and family members in this new
skills training will help to emphasize destigmatization as a training goal as
well as the partnership between mental health personnel, advocates, and law
enforcement personnel. The importance
of partnerships can develop from the start of an officer's career. (See Policy Statement 33: Identifying
Trainers, for more on incorporating consumers and family members into training
initiatives.)
Third, this orientation to mental health issues for
personnel should teach them the importance of getting the right assistance and
referrals for those with mental illness and victims of crime. Understanding local resources, their
criteria for gaining access, and other sources of assistance will be of
tremendous benefit to personnel.
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b.
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Incorporate
at least eight (and as many as fifteen) hours of training in general mental
health issues into existing recruit (academy-level) training programs for law
enforcement staff.
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Recruit training refers to the fundamentals taught to each
new law enforcement officer ("recruits"). Regardless of educational level attained, all new recruits are
required to train in the academy before beginning service at a law enforcement
agency. (The duration of academy
training for lateral transfers will vary by state.) Academy-level training should incorporate at least eight hours
(and as many as fifteen) of training on general mental health issues. These may be integrated into existing
training modules.State mandates for training and existing curricula
differ across jurisdictions. Agencies will need to tailor training models to
their unique needs and requirements. (See chart for suggested training
topics.)
Given the complex nature of many situations encountered by
law enforcement officers, recruit training should touch on signs and symptoms
of mental illness, dual diagnosis of mental illness and drug/alcohol abuse, and
related issues. Again, although recruits cannot and should not be trained as
diagnosticians, they must be trained to respond to a range of aberrant
behavior, regardless of whether it can be attributed to mental illness, a
medical disorder such as epilepsy, drug abuse, or a combination of these
factors. (See Policy Statement 4:
On-Scene Response, for a more thorough discussion of people with co-occurring
disorders, especially as they relate to law enforcement; also Policy Statement
37: Co-occurring Disorders.)
After finishing academy training, recruits (now considered
"new hires") are assigned to work with more senior Field Training
Officers (FTOs) before beginning independent duty. Like all new employees, new officers are extremely
impressionable. FTOs are responsible
for introducing the new officers to agency culture and priorities. Additionally, the FTO may contribute to the
new officer's patterns of behavior. For
these reasons, it is important that among the issues FTOs review, they
understand the recruit mental health training to be able to reinforce topics
covered at the academy.
To complement pre-service training for recruits, law
enforcement agencies should make an effort to acquaint new hires with community
members who have mental illness and family members of people with mental
illness. Familiarity with consumers is
of particular importance, as many new officers may have had little to no
contact with this population. Officers
should be encouraged to visit consumer clubhouses and peer support projects,
offer to sit on ACT program boards of directors, speak at local mental health
group meetings, and participate (when invited) in social events where consumers
are regularly present. Interactions
with people who have mental illness who are not in crisis can put a "human
face" on mental illness that will challenge myths or misconceptions
officers may have.
Example:
Long Beach (CA) Police Department
The Long Beach Police Department requires that
all new recruits attend "Field Contacts with People with Mental
Illness." Through this course, recruits are introduced to consumers both
in the classroom and in mental health facilities.
Example:
Montgomery County (MD) Police
Department
The Montgomery County Police Department holds
part of its training in the physical space of a public mental health facility
to familiarize officers with people with mental illnesses.
Through such training exercises, officers see that people
with mental illness do not always exhibit signs of their condition. The officers also come to understand the
effects of unintentionally stigmatizing people with mental illness, and the
impact that an inappropriate response in a situation involving mental illness
can have on a person, a family member, the victim, or the community.
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c.
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Provide
to patrol officers at least twenty hours, over a three-year cycle, of
in-service training about mental illness that includes in-depth reviews of
topics covered generally in recruit training and on additional topics.
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As discussed at the outset of this policy statement,
in-service training refers to periodic courses provided to all officers at some
interval (e.g., annually, biannually) to expand on previous training or as a
refresher. Though some of these topics
may be addressed in new skills or recruit training, in-service training is an
important opportunity to reinforce the department's sensitivity to people with mental
illness and to update staff about changes to the department's response
protocols. At least twenty hours of
in-service training should be provided over a three-year cycle. In some cases,
it may be inappropriate to wait until such training sessions; in such an event,
the updates can be provided during informational roll calls, integrated into
related modules such as those on use of force, cultural diversity, or special
populations. Stand-alone modules are
preferable, but recognizing the many mandate training topics, an integrated
model that uses some stand-alone modules may be necessary. Issues such as the difference between mental illness and disorders such as epilepsy or autism, cultural and gender differences among individuals with mental illness, and medication issues may all be suitable topics for in-service training (see chart for more suggested topics.)
Example:
Seattle (WA) Police Department
The Seattle Police Department requires all
officers to attend a mandatory eight-hour block of instruction to develop an
adequate competency level when encountering citizens with mental illnesses.
Trainers should consider including nontraditional
exercises such as having police officers attempt tasks associated with daily
living while being exposed to "voices." Training should also include
opportunities to meet with consumers and their families in the field, at
clubhouses, shelters, soup kitchens, and NAMI support parties and meetings,
just as is recommended for recruits. In
addition, training should provide the chance for law enforcement officers to
visit crisis centers and mental health facilities in order to gain resource
awareness. Officers should be given ample opportunity topractice de-escalation
techniques, such as talking to the person with mental illness and waiting out a
violent episode, as well asto run through diversion protocols that rely
oncontacting community-basedmental health services and supports. (See Policy
Statement 3: On-Scene Assessment, for more on de-escalation techniques.)
Role-playing exercises are one way to help officers model these behaviors prior
to using them in the field. As a caution, the training facilitator should carefully
monitor role-playing exercises. When left unchecked, officers can disengage and
not fully participate in role-play exercises or, at the other extreme,
participants can be become overinvolved to the detriment of the class and
ultimately to the detriment of people with mental illness.
Example:
Montgomery County (MD) Police Department
The Montgomery County Police Department employs
an exercise in which officers are required to wear headphones that blare loud
music and voices, conveying disconnected thinking. Officers are asked to go
about their routine tasks while wearing the headphones. The purpose of the
activity is to simulate some of the challenges that people with mental illness
face.
For larger jurisdictions, more sophisticatedtraining
technologies may be available, including computer-simulated shoot/don't shoot
scenarios or other media requiring officers to make split-second decisions
involving people with mental illness.
In these situations, what the officer chooses to do determines what he
or she sees next. These methods enhance critical-incident decision making
skills and promote compliance withuse of force protocols. Thistechnology could
beused inthis contextso officers can see the resultsoftheir decisions in a
training environment. Videotapes are
useful for refresher courses or roll-call training, as they usually succeed in
getting people talking. They can augment discussions and stimulate debate, but
they are not the sole response to training needs.
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d.
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Prepare
select law enforcement staff to serve on a special team by providing them with
advanced skills training on the fullest range of mental health topics every
three years.
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Advanced training courses should typically be at least 40
hours and should be geared toward officers who will serve on special teams that
focus on calls involving people with mental illness. (See chart for topics.)
Consumers and their families, advocates, and mental health
care providers should be included extensively in specialized training.
Additionally, as specialized training entails more time than in-service training, information provided to
the officers should be more in-depth. The Memphis Police Department,
Albuquerque Police Department, Montgomery County Police Department, Roanoke
Police Department, Pinellas County Sheriff's Office, and Athens-Clarke County
Police Department are among those law enforcement agencies that have developed
a 40-hour advanced training course.
Ideally, class size for advanced training classes should
be kept manageable to ensure a facilitator-to-student ratio that allows for
total participation. Some agencies may
decide that only a special team of officers will receive this training course,
while other departments will mandate the advanced training for all officers.
The audience does not affect the information that should be included in an
advanced training. Field Training
Officers and others engaged in training or supervising patrol officers and
dispatchers should be required to attend the advanced training.
Advanced skills trainings should include all of the
techniques referred to previously, including extended visits to local mental
health facilities to learn about treatments offered and opportunities for
computer simulations. As an additional consideration, an emphasis may be placed
on less-than-lethal (LTL) alternatives and on education to destigmatize mental
illness and lessen fear should be provided to enhance shoot/don't shoot
decisions.
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e.
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Train
communications personnel (call takers and dispatchers) that work with law
enforcement on how to deal with calls that may involve mental illness.
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Communications personnel who work with law enforcement
agencies play an important role in an agency's response to people with mental
illness. Training communications
personnel is not possible for every law enforcement agency, especially where
911 services are under the jurisdiction of the county or larger municipality.
When it is possible, however, law enforcement agencies should involve call
takers and dispatchers in training to enhance law enforcement service to people
with mental illness.
Training communications personnel is imperative because
the nature of their actions will frame how much information callers provide to
them and how callers perceive the agencies' sensitivity. These personnel also
shape the responding officer's state of mind upon arriving at the scene by
emphasizing information that can increase or decrease officer fear or other
preconceptions. The questions call
takers ask and the information relayed by dispatchers ensure that responders
have access to all possible information so that they are aware of disposition
options. The responding officer can direct citizens to proper services, treat
them effectively and with dignity, and de-escalate situations.
Example:
Houston (TX) Police Department
The Houston Police Department credits the
training of dispatch and communications staff as a key to their success in
working with people with mental illness. Personnel were trained to ask
necessary questions in a timely and appropriate manner. The goal of this
training is to ensure that responding officers are provided with as much information
as possible
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