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<p><bold>THE IMPACTS OF THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC ON POLICE ACTIVITIES: AN
INTEGRATIONAL REVIEW</bold></p>
<p><bold>Marvyn Kevin Valente Brito</bold></p>
<p>Bacharel em Direito pela Universidade Federal do Pará. Pós-graduado
lato sensu em Direito Penal e Processual Penal pela Universidade Cândido
Mendes. Pós-graduado lato sensu em Direito Militar pela Universidade
Cândido Mendes. Mestre em Segurança Pública pelo PPGSP da Universidade
Federal do Pará.</p>
<p><bold>País:</bold> Brasil <bold>Estado:</bold> Pará
<bold>Cidade:</bold> Belém</p>
<p><bold>Email:</bold> marvynvalente.adv@gmail.com <bold>Orcid:</bold>
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5716-3474</p>
<p><bold>Simone Souza da Costa Silva</bold></p>
<p>Doutora em Psicologia pela Universidade de Brasília. Pós-doutora em
Ciências da Reabilitação pela Universidade de Dortmund - Alemanha.</p>
<p><bold>País:</bold> Brasil <bold>Estado:</bold> Pará
<bold>Cidade:</bold> Belém</p>
<p><bold>Email:</bold> symon.ufpa@gmail.com <bold>Orcid:</bold>
https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0795-2998</p>
<p><bold>Contribuições dos autores:</bold> Marvyn realizou a coleta e
análise dos dados, bem como, a redação do texto e padronização das
normas de acordo com a revista. Simone foi responsável pela revisão do
texto e adição de partes significativas no estudo.</p>
<p><bold>ABSTRACT</bold></p>
<p>This article aims to organize and analyze Brazilian and international
studies that investigate the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on police
activities. An integrational review was used as a way of selecting the
studies. After applying the inclusion and exclusion criteria, twenty-six
articles were selected, whose main results were the need for
intervention and projects that focus on preserving the mental health of
police officers, and the opportunity for police institutions to rethink
their role in, and their relationship with the community. There is also
a need to develop more research based on the impacts of COVID-19 on
police activity.</p>
<p><bold>Keywords:</bold> Pandemic. COVID-19. Police. Integrational
review.</p>
<p><bold>RESUMO</bold></p>
<p><bold><italic>OS IMPACTOS DA PANDEMIA DE COVID-19 NAS ATIVIDADES
POLICIAIS: UMA REVISÃO INTEGRATIVA</italic></bold></p>
<p>O presente artigo tem como objetivo organizar e analisar os estudos
nacionais e internacionais que investigam os impactos da pandemia de
COVID-19 nas atividades policiais. Como forma metodológica de seleção
dos estudos, adotou-se a revisão integrativa. Após a aplicação dos
critérios de inclusão e exclusão resultou na seleção de 26 artigos, que
apresentaram como principais resultados, a necessidade de intervenções e
projetos voltados para preservação da saúde mental dos policiais e a
oportunidade de as instituições policiais repensarem seu papel e relação
com a comunidade. Verificou-se também a necessidade de desenvolvimento
de mais pesquisas voltadas para os impactos do COVID-19 na atividade
policial.</p>
<p><bold>Palavras-chave:</bold> Pandemia. COVID-19. Polícia. Revisão
Integrativa.</p>
<p><bold>Data de Recebimento:</bold> 11/10/2021 – <bold>Data de
Aprovação:</bold> 10/06/2022</p>
<p><bold>DOI:</bold> 10.31060/rbsp.2022.v.16.n3.1609</p>
<p><bold>INTRODUCTION</bold></p>
<p>The pandemic caused by SARS-CoV-2, a virus with high mutation and
transmission rates, associated with a lack of vaccines, changed
interpersonal relationships worldwide. Health measures were recommended
to governments by the World Health Organization (WHO), in an attempt to
reduce transmission and infection rates (BEZERRA <italic>et al</italic>,
2020). These acts imposed a “new normal” on people, creating a global
need for adaptation and protection policies.</p>
<p>Preventive measures, like wearing masks, social distancing and social
isolation, the use of hand sanitizer, and constantly washing food and
hands are new ways of behaving and habits that have had to be learned in
order to avoid the transmission of SARS-CoV-2. Prolonging the use of
such preventive habits, however, will have negative consequences of a
physical and psychological order in individuals (BEZERRA <italic>et
al</italic>, 2020).</p>
<p>According to Bezerra <italic>et al</italic> (2020), Brazilians
started adopting behaviors that threaten their health. A study of 47,184
Brazilians by way of a questionnaire revealed that during the COVID
pandemic individuals engaged in less physical activity, increased the
time they spent in front of screens (TVs, tablets, and computers), and
reduced their consumption of healthy food, while increasing their
consumption of ultra-processed food, and alcohol and tobacco. Other
research carried out by online questionnaire with 3,223 Brazilians
identified that in the first three months of social isolation during
quarantine, there was an increase in stress, depression, panic crises,
and anxiety (LIPP &amp; LIPP, 2020).</p>
<p>In addition to evidence that reveals the general impact on everyday
lives, the pandemic also had an impact on professional activities. In
this respect, it was necessary for individuals and organizations to
adapt to the new rules for performing tasks, where working from home was
the main solution found in many professions. Some professionals,
however, found it impossible to work away from their traditional place
of work because they are involved with essential activities, such as
being on the front line in the fight against COVID-19, or because they
guarantee basic supplies for human life. Informal workers were also
deeply impacted by the pandemic, making it impossible for them to carry
out their work without considerable exposure to the risk of
contamination (MATTEI &amp; HEINEN, 2020).</p>
<p>Among the professionals considered as being on the front line in the
fight against the pandemic were health professionals, immunology and
virology scientists, and public security professionals. In a systematic
review involving meta-analysis, Silva <italic>et al</italic> (2020)
identified the prevalence of anxiety in 35% of all health professionals
during the COVID-19 pandemic, with a higher risk incidence in women and
nurses, when compared to men and doctors. The study also found that some
factors causing stress are more prevalent than others, such as: acting
on the front line of the pandemic, the fear of infection or of being
infected, and having a chronic disease.</p>
<p>In their integrational review, Teixeira <italic>et al</italic> (2020)
assessed the mental stability of health professionals during the
pandemic, and highlighted contamination risk and intense psychological
distress as factors that compromised the participants’ mental health.
The main reports were of symptoms of anxiety, depression, a loss of
sleep quality, drug abuse, psychosomatic symptoms, and fear of being
infected or transmitting the virus to family members. This research also
found the adverse effects caused by PPE, which is necessary for
minimizing the risk of infection; continuous use of this equipment
caused skin lesions on the nose, hands, cheeks, and forehead. Frequent
hand washing increased the possibility of dermatitis in this region,
leading to misuse of PPE and greater exposure to infection by
professionals.</p>
<p>In a cross-sectional study using an online questionnaire with 332
medical doctors in Brazil, Brito-Marques <italic>et al</italic> (2021)
found that 73.1% of the participants suffered from poor sleep quality
during the COVID-19 pandemic, thus characterizing insomnia. Among the
factors associated with the results were isolation, concerns about the
COVID-19 outbreak, and symptoms of anxiety and depression.</p>
<p>Like health professionals, police officers continued working during
the pandemic and needed to develop appropriate techniques and responses
to the challenges posed by COVID-19. The uniform police have no general
protocol of health measures imposed by their managers that obliges them
to comply with actions that guarantee their safety. The demands police
officers face can compromise not just their professional activities, but
also their physical and mental health.</p>
<p>These data are corroborated by the initial results found by Fernandes
&amp; Lima (2021), whose work tried to understand the multiple meanings
and influences that compose the social representations of public
security professionals vis-à-vis the pandemic and the way in which it
has been faced in Brazil. Data analysis revealed that only 28.5% of
participating police officers reported having received training that
helped them face these new challenges. They also observed that only
12.5% ​​of the state’s civil police officers and 17.2% of federal police
officers were aware of the booklets prepared by the <italic>Secretaria
Nacional de Segurança Pública</italic> (SENASP) that give guidance on
preventive measures and how to minimize COVID-19 contamination. The
authors understand that the lack of training aggravated the high
contamination rates in North and Northeastern states, which have the
worst percentage of training and high infection levels.</p>
<p>A good example of the new skills developed by police officers is
population containment order to ensure the WHO health recommendations in
preventing the transmission of COVID-19. It is up to police officers to
maintain physical distance, and to avoid crowded places without any
ventilation. When there is a high contamination rate, they also need to
ensure social isolation and that the limitations of freedom to go out
are enforced.</p>
<p>Security professionals have the duty to ensure public and legal
order, the accomplishment of health measures, and the sensation of
social peace (BRASIL, 1988; MINAYO &amp; ADORNO, 2013). The bases of the
tasks undertaken by the uniform police are: hierarchy and discipline,
implementing a vast system of punishment and reward, and directly linked
to perform the work (SPODE &amp; MERLO, 2006). Uniform police officers’
activities include: enforcing public security policy; overt patrolling;
ensuring a sense of social security; and maintaining public order by way
of their technical-operational knowledge and instrumental tools inherent
in supporting military activity (FRAGA, 2006).</p>
<p>These activities also have important peculiarities to be considered,
such as the absence of any predetermined schedule, especially for the
end of the shift, not having fixed labor hours, and the duty to be
available 24 hours a day to the State (FRAGA, 2006). Besides specific
questions concerning task accomplishment, there are also particular
aspects of the activity itself, because police officers act against
crime and violence in their daily routine, patrol at night, and on
highways, provide support at events, and other activities (BERNARDINO
&amp; BERNARDINO, 2018).</p>
<p>According to Bernardino &amp; Bernardino (2018), police officers live
in a permanent state of stress that complicates the relationship and
balance between their professional and personal lives. In research
carried out with police officers who have a disability that was acquired
as a result of their work activities, one of the participants pointed
out that a true police officer is one who is available 24 hours by day,
which creates difficulties when it comes to enjoying moments outside
when he is not at work (DE CASTILHO LOPES &amp; PEREIRA LEITE,
2015).</p>
<p>These aspects are inherent to police officers’ activities because
they are stressors that have a direct influence on their professional
tasks when they are associated with internal and external factors.
According to Lipp &amp; Malagris (2000, pp. 620), stress is “the
reaction of an organism that has physical, psychological, mental, and
hormonal components derived from the necessity of dealing with something
that, at that moment, threatens mental or physical stability”. Lipp
&amp; Malagris (2000) also highlight that incentives and stressors are
diverse, i.e. pain, fear, loss of a loved one, speaking in front of
others, or even being promoted or having a child, in such a way that is
not possible to ascribe the reaction trigger to any particular
factor.</p>
<p>According to Matarazzo <italic>et al</italic> (2020), the role of the
police during the COVID-19 pandemic expanded, which implies rethinking
professional practice and changing the perspective from the “war against
crime” to one of humanitarian actions. For this to happen, the
institutional structure, the information and operational protocols, and
the symbolic and linguistic structures that allow closer contact with
society must be modified.</p>
<p>Maskály <italic>et al</italic> (2021) investigated the changes that
police institutions in twenty-seven countries underwent during the
so-called “first wave” of the COVID pandemic. The study found that both
police organizations and police activities changed in the participating
countries. Among these changes, those related to internal bureaucratic
police procedures were found to a great extent, and to a lesser extent
changes in interactions with the community, which involve the role of
the police as an institution for guaranteeing that citizen mobility is
limited.</p>
<p>With regard to internal procedures, Maskály <italic>et al</italic>
(2021) report that the interviewed police officers mentioned that the
flow of information was very deficient or contradictory, which hindered
the application of the new rules and procedures imposed because of the
pandemic and their relationship with the community. This consideration
was also observed by Matarazzo <italic>et al</italic> (2020), while in
their study of Brazilian police officers Alcadipani <italic>et
al</italic> (2020) found that a lack of information, training and
specific protocols left police officers disoriented in the application
of sanitary measures.</p>
<p>Among the procedural changes, Maskály <italic>et al</italic> (2021)
found that police blitzes (68,2%), the way people were arrested (74%),
and petty crime rates (56,6%) changed during the pandemic. The police
administrators reported that learning and training procedures changed
too, and started being carried out virtually, with distance working also
being encouraged.</p>
<p>According to Jones (2020), because of the exponential virus infection
process, the uniform police officers’ responsibility for guaranteeing
order and public health measures led to discussions about the legitimacy
of the police. According to the author, the more legitimate the police
officers are seen to be by the community, the more likely it is that the
latter will comply with the isolation and social distancing measures
that are imposed. On the other hand, the more illegitimate the police
are perceived to be, the more likely the community will be to fail to
comply with the measures.</p>
<p>Despite the essential nature of the activity carried out by uniform
police officers, and which poses risks to the lives of these
professionals, and to those working in the health area, little is known
about their experiences at the time of the pandemic. According to the
Violence Monitor - (NEV-USP and <italic>Fórum Brasileiro de Segurança
Pública</italic>), in Pará in 2020, 5,828 police officers out of a total
of 19,561 stopped working due to COVID-19 infection. This number
corresponds to 29,79% of the total police force of
<italic>PM</italic>/PA. During this period there were forty-nine deaths
from COVID-19, meaning that Pará was the state with the third highest
number of police officers killed by the coronavirus. The study also
states that the number of deaths caused by COVID-19 was more than double
the number of police who were killed on the streets in the same
period.</p>
<p>On May 2020, the <italic>Fórum Brasileiro de Segurança
Pública</italic> (FBSP) published a technical note on the relationship
between the pandemic and Brazilian police officers, which found that
68.8% of all Brazilian civil and uniform police, excluding those from
the State of São Paulo, were, &quot;(I) afraid of contracting or having
someone close to me contaminated by the coronavirus.&quot; The data also
revealed that 67.9% of police officers did not receive PPE.
Additionally, 4.9% of Brazilian police officers stressed the fact that
they were not ready to deal with the pandemic (LOTTA <italic>et
al</italic>, 2020).</p>
<p>Pará, a Brazilian state with 8,690,745 people (IBGE, 2010) has 14,236
full-time uniform police officers in fourteen regions in the state
(Metropolitan Region of Belém, Santarém, Marabá, Castanhal, Tucuruí,
Redenção, Paragominas, Capanema, Altamira, Abaetetuba, Itaituba,
Salvaterra, Breves and São Félix do Xingu). According to the IBGE
(2014), Pará is the worst northern state in terms of the ratio of police
to inhabitants, with just one police officer for every 500 people, and a
deficit of 51.42% compared to the number expected by the Basic Police
Organization Law of Pará.</p>
<p>Considering the essential nature of police officers’ work and the
risk to human life when exposed to coronavirus, the present study aims
to organize and analyze Brazilian and international studies that have
investigated the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic.</p>
<p><bold>METHOD</bold></p>
<p>This study chose to undertake an integrational review of the
literature, because its methodological scope allows its analytical
content to include experimental, non-experimental, empirical and
theoretical studies(SOUZA; SILVA &amp; CARVALHO, 2010). Its construction
followed Ganong’s model (1987): 1) identification of the topic and
selection of the main question of the research; 2) the establishment of
inclusion and exclusion criteria; 3) recognition of pre-selected
studies; 4) categorization of the selected studies, 5) analysis and
interpretation of the results; and 6) presentation of the knowledge
review.</p>
<p>The main question of this research is: What are the principal impacts
caused by the COVID-19 pandemic on uniform police activity, since they
are in the front line, fighting against virus transmission?</p>
<p>The P.V.O. technique was used to define the search descriptors, which
is a variation of the PICO technique (RAMOS, 2015). “P” refers to the
descriptors that are related to participants/contexts/sources, which
were established as being “police officers”; “V” applies to the
variables/categories to be investigated, in this case “pandemic
impacts”; and “O” (outputs) are the expected results. “O” in this study
was the analysis of published articles (author's name, title, year of
publication), the objective nature (empirical or theoretical) of the
article, and the place where the research was undertaken. In applying
P.V.O., the following descriptors were selected: <italic>Polícia&quot;,
&quot;Policiais&quot;, &quot;Polícia Militar&quot;, &quot;Profissionais
de Segurança Pública&quot;, &quot;Pandemia&quot;, &quot;Pandemia de
COVID-19&quot;,</italic> &quot;COVID-19&quot; and &quot;SARS-COV- 2”,
their corresponding translations in English being “Officer”. “Police”,
“Police Organizations”, “COVID-19 Pandemic” and “Pandemic”.</p>
<p>Once the descriptors had been chosen, it was possible to build the
procedures needed for achieving the search strategies. Platforms like
<italic>Coordenação de Aperfeiçoamento de Pessoal de Nivel
Superior</italic> (CAPES) and Scientific Electronic Library Online
(SciELO) were chosen as the directories. These databases were chosen
because they carry a wide range of works in diverse fields of
knowledge.</p>
<p>The third step, the identification of pre-selected and selected
studies, consisted of selecting articles after reading their titles and
abstracts. Five criteria were chosen: 1) the terms must appear in the
title; 2) they must have been published within the last two years; 3)
they cannot be repeated; 4) they must be freely accessible; 5) they
should pass blind peer review. The conclusion criteria adopted were: 1)
dissertations and theses; 2) papers; 3) repeated journal articles; 4)
they were not a research theme. The last step was to read the articles
in full, according to Figure 1.</p>
<p><bold>RESULTS</bold></p>
<p>After the data research, twenty-six articles were selected and read.
Data collection consisted of identifying the following information: (i)
reference (author, article title, year of publication and published
journal); (ii) purpose of the study (iii) nature of the article; (iv)
location where the research was carried out. Chart 1 shows this
information.</p>
<p>Chart 1 shows that studies produced on five continents were located:
North America, South America, Asia, Europe and Africa. Asia produced the
most studies about COVID-19 and police activity, with a total of ten,
most of them produced in India and China. Dai <italic>et al</italic>
(2021) highlighted how lockdown impacted the quantity and the nature of
calls to the emergency number in China, pointing out that the overall
number of calls decreased, but complaints about domestic violence
increased significantly at the beginning of the quarantine. In analyzing
the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the sleep cycle of police
officers, and the potential of the pandemic as a stressor, Dey
<italic>et al</italic>, (2021), Khadse <italic>et al</italic> (2021),
and Jiang (2021) identified that it has negative consequences on the
mental health of police officers.</p>
<p>Seven studies were produced in Europe. Raciborski <italic>et
al</italic> (2020) tried to look into the level of police familiarity
with prevention methods and infection forms of the virus, and verified
that officers had great knowledge of prevention methods and ways of
becoming sick, although 25% of the respondents did not observe the
social distancing policy and the mask wearing order during the
interview. In their turn, Gujski <italic>et al</italic> (2020) carried
out a study in Poland to determine the prevalence of current and past
SARS-CoV- 2 infections in Polish police officers. The results pointed to
the absence of infection by the virus and a very low rate of police
officers who had antibodies against SARS-CoV-2.</p>
<p>In Macedonia, Ristevska-Dimitrovska and Batic (2020) investigated
health workers, and police officers who were on the front line during
the pandemic, the prevalence of psychological problems and their
resilience level, and compared the results with those of the general
population. Data analysis revealed that Macedonian police officers did
not have psychological problems caused by the pandemic, which is the
opposite result of other studies (DEY <italic>et al</italic>, 2021;
KHADSE <italic>et al</italic>, 2020; and JIANG, 2021), and they had a
huge capacity for resilience when compared to other health professionals
and the population in general.</p>
<p>In North America, especially in the United States, four studies were
found, three of which are theoretical, with just one being empirical.
Ashby (2021) observed a decrease in the number of calls to the American
police emergency number. In line with Dey <italic>et al</italic> (2021)
in China, they found that calls asking for police assistance for
domestic violence increased significantly during the lockdown, while
emergency calls generally decreased. Jones (2020) and White and Fradella
(2020) analyzed the role of the police in ensuring American citizens'
compliance with health measures and the blocking order, in which the
legitimacy of the police vis-à-vis the community, and the leadership of
community leaders have a fundamental role to play in ensuring the safety
of the population.</p>
<p>Only three studies were found in South America, two of these in
Brazil and the other in Peru. Among the main findings, the notes made by
Alcadipani <italic>et al</italic> (2020) and Matarazzo <italic>et
al</italic> (2020) stand out, which indicate the necessity to reorganize
the role of the police in the Brazilian pandemic scenario, showing that
political conflicts, occupational culture and a shortage of materials in
the force have a direct impact on the effectiveness of police actions.
The authors also highlighted the importance of police having a
humanitarian role, in contrast to the “war against crime” discourse that
is widespread in police institutions. Hernández-Vásquez and Azañedo
(2020) point out the need for the Peruvian government to adopt
protection measures to avoid police contamination, due to the large
number of deaths of these professionals in the early months of the
pandemic.</p>
<p>Just two studies were found in Africa considering the police and
COVID-19, both of them in Nigeria. Okon <italic>et al</italic> (2021)
evaluated the knowledge and perceptions of the risk of contamination by
SARS-CoV-2 in a group of Nigerian police officers. Their results
revealed great expertise with regard to prevention policies and ways of
becoming contaminated, but police officers tend not to adhere to
preventive practices against this infection. Aborisade (2021)
investigated the illegal use of force by Nigerian police in enforcing
blockade orders and preventive measures of contagion, and found several
issues in law enforcement by police officers, revealing abuse of
authority and the sexual assault of citizens. The author also highlights
the absence of police legitimacy in the community, suggesting that this
fact was caused by a long period of rule by a military regime in
Nigeria.</p>
<p>Of the twenty-six selected studies, eight of them are theoretical and
eighteen are empirical. In the theoretical studies Stogner <italic>et
al</italic> (2020), Garbarino <italic>et al</italic> (2021) and
Hernández-Vásquez &amp; Azañedo (2020) reflected on the need of
institutions to develop accommodation programs to preserve mental
health, and to decrease psychological impacts in police officers. The
authors point out that the activities performed by police officers are
as important as those performed by healthcare professionals, whose
actions are essential for facing up to the pandemic. These notes are
also present in Boovaragasamy <italic>et al</italic> (2021), Frenkel
<italic>et al</italic> (2021), Yuan <italic>et al</italic> (2020) and
Grover’s (2020) empirical studies, which reinforce the necessity of
having a special view of police officers, since their activities are
themselves marked by stressors, which when associated with demands
generated by the pandemic may lead to the emergence of depression,
anxiety, sleep loss, and suicide among officers.</p>
<p><bold>DISCUSSION</bold></p>
<p>In general terms, the results revealed a problem that is little
discussed in literature about the police profession. These theoretical
and empirical studies, which investigated the impact of the COVID-19
pandemic on police activities, indicate the vulnerabilities that these
professionals are exposed to in their daily routines. These
vulnerabilities, however, increased in the face of the threats generated
by the virus. Police officers’ fragility, as evidenced in the studies we
reviewed, confirms the need for actions to protect police officers’
mental health when they are faced with the challenge of ensuring health
protection measures, and the safety of society in general.</p>
<p>We observed that concern with officers during the pandemic was an
object of interest of studies published in different countries, and we
detected no prevalence of studies in either developed or underdeveloped
countries.</p>
<p>For example, Indian studies pointed out that the country, which is
considered to be a developing one, informed of massive changes in the
duties of police officers, who became the guarantors of the lockdown
imposed by the Indian government. This led to changes in sleep patterns,
the development of anxiety, depression, and post-traumatic stress, and
possible long term impacts on the professional and private lives of
police officers (DEY <italic>et al</italic>, 2021; KHADSE <italic>et
al</italic>, 2020; BOOVARAGASAMY <italic>et al</italic>, 2021), as also
found by studies produced in developed countries in Europe, for example
(RACIBORSKI <italic>et al</italic>, 2020; FRENKEL <italic>et
al</italic>, 2021; GARBARINO <italic>et al</italic>, 2021).</p>
<p>The studies that involved police officers’ mental health indicated
the need for actions and projects for preserving mental health (DEY
<italic>et al</italic>, 2021; FRENKEL <italic>et al,</italic> 2020;
ALARCÓN-ZAYAS and BOUHABEN, 2021; GARBARINO <italic>et al,</italic>
2021; STOGNER <italic>et al,</italic> 2020; RACIBORSKI <italic>et
al,</italic> 2020; GROVER <italic>et al,</italic> 2020; DIMITROVSKA and
BATIC, 2020; HUANG <italic>et al</italic>, 2021; YUAN <italic>et
al,</italic> 2020; BOOVARAGASAMY <italic>et al</italic>, 2021;
HERNÁNDEZ-VÁSQUEZ, and AZAÑEDO, 2020). The importance of this was
pointed out by the study of Jiang (2021), who examined the relationship
between the psychological support received from the police corporation
and the officer’s response to stress. The study indicated that the
institution’s psychological support must be established as a standard of
service provided to police officers because this increases a positive
response to the stress they suffer in times of pandemic.</p>
<p>Most of the studies were empirical, but there were also some
theoretical ones. This shows that these studies complement and reaffirm
the data and the conclusions reached by others. The profession of police
officer is potentially stressful due to its lack of predetermined labor
hours, the need to maintain public order, and the fight against crime
(HUANG <italic>et al</italic>, 2021; HERNÁNDEZ-VÁSQUEZ and AZAÑEDO,
2020). But during the pandemic the police needed to carry out actions
that are not found in their normal daily lives, such as providing
guidance and raising the awareness of the population of the importance
of wearing masks, and using hand sanitizer, while avoiding approaching
and arresting people for petty crimes (JONES, 2020), all of which had an
impact on the daily life of the police institution.</p>
<p>On the other hand, in addition to being more exposed to virus
infection, police officers suffered an increase in their stress and
anxiety levels, had to guarantee the lockdown orders, control crowds and
escort ambulances. The fact is that with these new functions a
discussion has arisen about police legitimacy, that is, whether police
actions are seen as legitimate by citizens. Jones (2020) points to the
need to incorporate the application of procedural justice in police
actions, especially in the poorest communities, and in most cases this
conflicts with recognition of the legitimacy of the conduct of the
police.</p>
<p>Jones (2020) and White and Fradella (2020) theoretically present the
same foundation of the empirical study developed by Aborisade (2021),
which emphasizes the importance of the role of the police in preventing
the spread of Coronavirus, as well as the need for applying procedural
justice in all their actions, thereby ensuring their decisions are fair
and humanitarian. Aborisade (2021) points out that the imposition of
force, fear, and authoritarianism does not solve problems of police
legitimacy; on the contrary, they will only increase tensions between
the community and state agents. But the author also points out that the
pandemic has allowed the police to reinvent themselves, which has
resulted in benefits by way of positive interactions with society, which
have facilitated compliance with the health guidelines and restrictions
that the police aim to guarantee.</p>
<p>Alcadipani <italic>et al</italic> (2020) also alert to the fact that
maintaining the understanding the police have of their role, like the
“war against crime” and adopting military positions, can result in a
worse relationship with the community, thus harming and possibly
destroying its view of the legitimacy of the police. An example of this
was reported by Aborisade (2021), who demonstrated the lack of
application of procedural justice by the Nigerian police, which led to
abuses during the lockdown in the country, reports of sexual abuse,
bribes and different treatment for poor and rich communities. On the
other hand, the application of procedural justice positively reinforces
the police institution’s image, as reported by López-García (2020) in
Spain, where even with complaints of possible excesses by the Spanish
police, the majority of the population legitimized the police officers’
actions, because they understood their importance and the need for
them.</p>
<p>Matarazzo <italic>et al</italic> (2020) and Alcadipani <italic>et
al</italic> (2020) suggest the need to think of the police as a
community and non-militarized [<italic>the police in Brazil is a branch
of the military]</italic>, but non-militarization does not imply the
absence of weaponry and training, but a focus on humanitarian education
and community approach techniques. Matarazzo <italic>et al</italic>
(2020) also point out the need to review three dimensions in police
institutions: the occupational culture (where male chauvinism is
widespread); policy (which generates conflicts between authorities and
hinders leadership and practices for preventing the spread of the
disease) and; material (the absence of PPE and minimum working
conditions).</p>
<p>Therefore, given the results, it was found that such an institutional
change will possibly be of more benefit than harm to the institution.
There is a need, however, for articulation and cultural change in the
police, so that they understand their &quot;new&quot; role, and are able
to perform it more effectively and be accepted by the community. This is
also of benefit to the police themselves, who may feel more comfortable
taking care of their psychological and physical health, and there may
possibly be more positive responses in the daily life of the
profession.</p>
<p><bold>CONCLUSIONS</bold></p>
<p>The aim of this study was achieved, since it was possible, within the
methodological limitations imposed, to present the main results of
studies that focused on the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on police
activity, analyzing the main contributions and those places where the
studies were undertaken. After analyzing the results, we found that
there is a lack of academic production studying these impacts on police
forces, but there were important contributions that draw attention to
the need to prioritize mental health and redefine the attributions of
the police in society.</p>
<p>Among the main limitations are the fact that few studies focus on the
object being analyzed, and there is little information about the quality
of the journals. The absence of Brazilian studies should also be
mentioned, because this generated difficulties when it came to comparing
the realities of other countries with the Brazilian reality.</p>
<p>Finally, there is a need for more research that focuses on the
impacts of the pandemic on police activity, in the same proportion as
the investigations carried out on the impacts of the pandemic on
healthcare professionals, since, as well as being important, the police
play a fundamental role at the forefront of confronting the COVID-19
pandemic.</p>
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