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The nature of police involvement in mental health transfers

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 21:55 authored by Tamsin Short, Cleave MacDonald, Stefan Luebbers, James Ogloff, Stuart ThomasStuart Thomas
During the course of their duties, police regularly have contact with mentally ill persons who are experiencing psychiatric crisis and require some form of mental health transfer. This study examined 2611 unique mental health transfers completed by police in the Australian state of Victoria over an eight-month period in 2009-2010. The overwhelming majority of mental health transfers performed by police during this period were the result of unplanned calls for assistance. Although police frequently requested assistance from other services, these were often not available. The study findings support a substantial body of anecdotal evidence from police citing lengthy involvement with people experiencing mentally illness, with the average mental health transfer consuming 2.5 h of police time. The frontline responses of police to people in psychiatric crisis need to be more formally acknowledged and creative solutions need to be sought with health and welfare services to better meet the needs of those who are falling between the cracks of community mental health care services.

History

Journal

Police Practice and Research

Volume

15

Issue

4

Start page

336

End page

348

Total pages

13

Publisher

Routledge

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2012 Taylor and Franics

Former Identifier

2006056055

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-11-17

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