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- Title
Canadian Correctional Officers' Experiences of Workplace Safety and Stress During the COVID-19 Pandemic.
- Authors
Kocsis, Kristina; Lavoie, Jennifer
- Abstract
This research examined the experiences of Canadian correctional officers (COs) in providing essential services during the COVID-19 pandemic. The study applied theoretical models of stress to explore correlates of COVID-related stress in the correctional setting. Provincial COs (N = 596) took part in an online survey at the end of 2020. Only a quarter of participants reported they felt safe at their workplace during the pandemic. Participants also reported high levels of work stress typified by significant changes to their job responsibilities and role confusion stemming from pandemic-related policies. While most participants agreed that their workplace successfully implemented safeguards, they indicated key downstream considerations were lacking and perceived low levels of certain types of support. Several individuallevel, situational workplace stressors, and coping resources were revealed to be significant correlates of COVID-19 stress. In estimating a hierarchical linear regression model, COVID-19 stress was found to be primarily driven by perceived safety precaution implementation when controlling for individual-level vulnerabilities. Findings examine the impact of COVID-19 among frontline workers in forgotten sectors such as corrections to contribute knowledge that can be used to support COs' well-being in the face of future infectious disease planning, as well as implications for policy planning.
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic; CORRECTIONAL personnel; JOB stress; INDUSTRIAL safety; CAREER changes; COMMUNICABLE diseases; VIOLENCE in the workplace
- Publication
Canadian Journal of Criminology & Criminal Justice, 2023, Vol 65, Issue 1, p9
- ISSN
1707-7753
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.3138/cjccj.2022-0015