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{
    "code": "7HKDY3",
    "speakers": [
        {
            "code": "KNRD8T",
            "name": "Zsuzsanna Borbély",
            "biography": "Counseling psychologist and psychology teacher. She earned her degrees at the Eötvös Loránd University. She was psychologist and teacher at Körmend Law Enforcement School between 2014 and 2018. Currently, she is police psychologist of Budapest Liszt Ferenc Airport Police Directorate and a PhD student at the National University of Public Service Doctoral School of Law Enforcement. \r\nNext to the standard police psychologist work she taught law enforcement related phenomena in the area of psychology for the students of the law enforcement school. As a researcher, she is conducting research on the connection of health bevahior, occupational stress and burnout, especially among the young police trainees.",
            "avatar": "https://conference.cepol.europa.eu/media/avatars/BKA_0196_ig2_03VrPtH.jpg"
        }
    ],
    "title": "Mental health of police trainees during the first wave of the COVID-19 pandemic",
    "submission_type": {
        "en": "Long Shout 10min"
    },
    "track": {
        "en": "Health & Safety Issues for Law Enforcement Officials"
    },
    "state": "confirmed",
    "abstract": "The COVID-19 pandemic took power over the world in 2020. Because of this situation we surveyed the experiences of the police trainees that they observed in the first two months of the pandemic in Hungary as part of an ongoing research in the 2019-2020 school year. They were members of different police departments, and the epidemic-related activities became part of their everyday tasks.\r\nIn the research we used a questionnaire that we made out. It had 14 questions, and it was a part of our test battery, which examined mental health in a longitudinal study. The inventory was filled in online during the period of their professional examinations (the end of May – the beginning of June, 2020), and we got 28 answered questionnaire about the experience of policing the pandemic. The reason of low participation rate – 28 answered inventory from circa 100 people – was probably the impersonal online response, because the earlier data collections was leaded by the researchers.\r\nThe results showed that females experienced larger fear related to the health of relatives than males. Their everyday services were influenced significantly by sleeping difficulties and they have felt duties more physically overwhelming at this time. The outcomes did not show gender difference in the fields of mental health. \r\nDespite some negative influences, the pandemic was not perceived as particularly stressful for police work over the first two month of its eruption. Although the sample was not representative but it could mean a basis for the future research of these questions – especially because the pandemic is more stressful for everyone both mentally and physically at the time second and third wave.",
    "description": null,
    "duration": 10,
    "slot_count": 1,
    "do_not_record": false,
    "is_featured": false,
    "content_locale": "en",
    "slot": {
        "room": {
            "en": "Health & Safety for Law Enforcement"
        },
        "start": "2021-05-07T09:50:00+02:00",
        "end": "2021-05-07T10:00:00+02:00"
    },
    "image": null,
    "resources": []
}