During his VALOR presentation, Bouthillette listed the following contributing factors to officer suicides: persistent daily stress, exposure to human misery, anxiety about the job, and difficulty managing relationships and finances. Law enforcement as a profession continues to fail at providing credible support for cops with bleeding souls.
According to Dr. Olivia Johnson, an expert in officer wellness and a former police officer, "Officers are trained to respond to armed subjects. However, training falls short (and has for years) regarding the emotional and psychological toll of the job and the after-effects the job has on their personal and professional lives."
Johnson drives home the point that when an officer becomes the armed subject that is confronting themselves by suicidal thoughts, they are ill-equipped to counter this lethal threat to themselves. An officer may carry a trauma kit to mitigate the effects of physical wounds, but that gear does not include a tourniquet for a bleeding soul.
In order to better understand the circumstances associated with cop suicides, we need a centralized means for capturing pertinent data. According to Johnson, "We should not have to fight over this issue through media accounts. We should have a database that records these deaths, negating any and all arguments. The data would dictate where additional monies, research, and training/education are needed." For a national database to have any value, we would need the commitment of law enforcement executives to provide consistent reporting of pertinent data. When we bury an officer's suicide, we are unwittingly burying the remedy for preventing future suicides.
While the military recognizes and provides treatment for post-traumatic stress, law enforcement remains oblivious to this silent killer. During the course of their careers, law enforcement officers may experience numerous post-traumatic stress injuries. There is no instrument for measuring the individual impact of these injuries on an officer's state of mind, but the cumulative effect can be staggering. When these injuries to the psyche are compounded by financial or marital stress, the outcome may be fatal. But when the impacted officer realizes they need help, or their partner realizes they need to take that officer for help, where do they go for credible treatment?