4.5 Article

Police Violence and Public Health

Journal

ANNUAL REVIEW OF CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 18, Issue -, Pages 527-552

Publisher

ANNUAL REVIEWS
DOI: 10.1146/annurev-clinpsy-072720-020644

Keywords

police brutality; excessive force; mental health; physical health; mortality; health inequities; disparities; population health; structural racism

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Despite recently gaining attention from a public health perspective, police violence and use of excessive force in the USA have a significant impact on population health and health inequities. This article reviews recent literature and highlights the links between police violence and mental health symptoms, physical health conditions, and premature mortality. The findings show that police violence is common and disproportionately affects marginalized communities, particularly Black and Latinx individuals, leading to a range of negative health outcomes.
Despite their enormous potential impact on population health and health inequities, police violence and use of excessive force have only recently been addressed from a public health perspective. Moving to change this state of affairs, this article considers police violence in the USA within a social determinants and health disparities framework, highlighting recent literature linking this exposure to mental health symptoms, physical health conditions, and premature mortality. The review demonstrates that police violence is common in the USA; is disproportionately directed toward Black, Latinx, and other marginalized communities; and exerts a significant and adverse effect on a broad range of health outcomes. The state-sponsored nature of police violence, its embedding within a historical and contemporary context of structural racism, and the unique circumstances of the exposure itself make it an especially salient and impactful form of violence exposure, both overlapping with and distinct from other forms of violence. We conclude by noting potential solutions that clinical psychology and allied fields may offer to alleviate the impact of police violence, while simultaneously recognizing that a true solution to this issue requires a drastic reformation or replacement of the criminal justice system, as well as addressing the broader context of structural and systemic racism in the USA.

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