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      from 
      the MetroWest Daily News, Framingham, MA. 
      
        
    Some cops have trouble with trauma 
      
      By Timothy R. 
      Homan Correspondent 
    
      
      Sunday, January 29, 
      2006  
    
    
      
       Coming in contact with 
      gruesome murders and fatal car accidents can be traumatic, even for some 
      policemen.  
    
 
          When the victims of such 
      tragedies are tied to schools or businesses, the common practice is to 
      bring in psychologists to offer counseling to grieving students or 
      co-workers.  
    
 
          Not so in cop culture.  
    
 
          "Police officers are 
      frequently reluctant to access counseling services available," said Ronnie 
      Hirsh, director of the Peer Support Training Institute in New York.  
    
          He said many cops avoid 
      seeking mental or emotional support for "fear of ridicule, fear of job 
      sanctions, fear of headshrinkers in general."  
    
 
          Instead, police officers 
      turn to one another for help.  
    
          "Informal support is 
      always going on," said Hopkinton Police Chief Thomas Irvin, who added that 
      his staff will conduct a critical-stress management debriefing with the 
      aim of helping officers deal with the recent murder of Rachel Entwistle, 
      27, and her 9-month-old daughter, Lillian Rose, in Hopkinton.  
    
 
          He said the staff meeting 
      will be held in the next few days, more than a week after the bodies were 
      discovered.  
    
 
          "Doesn’t your gut tell you 
      that’s too long a period to wait?" asked Hal Brown, a licensed social 
      worker from Middleborough who has counseled police officers in dealing 
      with post-traumatic stress syndrome.  
    
 
          "You don’t want the 
      emotions to be buried, you want to let them out as soon as possible," he 
      said, adding that officers can suffer from acute symptoms right after an 
      incident or chronic symptoms years later.  
    
 
          Irvin said the last time 
      his department held such a meeting was in 2002, when Violet Carey, 5, and 
      her sister Iris, 4, were killed in a gas explosion at their Hopkinton 
      home.  
    
 
          "We only have the stress 
      debriefings for the more serious incidents that affect people 
      emotionally," said Irvin, but added he regularly reminds officers that the 
      department offers counseling services.  
    
 
          Experts say one of the 
      biggest hurdles in getting officers to open up with their feelings is 
      having them overcome the perceived expectation, from colleagues and the 
      general public, that they should exhibit nerves of steel, both on and off 
      duty.  
    
 
          "If you are perceived as 
      weak in law enforcement, your colleague might not want to work with you, 
      thinking you might choke up in a critical situation," said Peter Volkmann, 
      a retired police officer who works with the International Critical 
      Incident Stress Foundation in Maryland.  
    
 
          Additionally, he said, "No 
      one wants a scared cop coming to help them when they’re scared."  
    
 
          While psychological 
      support services are not used to their full capacity, what participation 
      does exist, specialists say, is preferable to the traditional coping 
      method.  
    
 
          "The common remedy is 
      drinking," Brown said.  
    
 
          Raising awareness of 
      occupational stress now begins early on in the career of a police officer, 
      during training at police academies.  
    
 
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