The Stress Impact on CSI: What They Don’t Show on TV

My Big Fat Healthy Life Blog

The majority of research regarding the effects of job stress in policing has been conducted with patrol officers. Only in very recent years have other types of “first responders” such as fire and ambulance personnel been taken into account when attempting to tally the toll these professions extract.

All research in the studies on traumatic stress have supported the contention that first responders experience a high level of stress when responding to traumatic scenes and are at a much higher risk of experiencing the ill effects of post-traumatic stress, and potentially developing Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) than the general public or any number of other professions. There is additionally ample support for what may be termed “cumulative career stress”, which is less the effect of one particularly horrendous event and more the accumulation of stress from repeatedly being exposed to, and bearing witness to, the various human tragedies that…

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5 thoughts on “The Stress Impact on CSI: What They Don’t Show on TV

    1. You found me again. This must be important if you’re risking reaching out to me now. There isn’t any more I can do to help.

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    1. Acostas is dead and Croix is nowhere to be found. The Agency has sent someone to collect you. I don’t know what they look like or I would tell you. Stay alert.

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