Accidental Discharge: Psychiatric test for serving Policemen – IGP

    Accidental Discharge: Psychiatric test for serving Policemen – IGP
    Inspector-General of Police (I-G), Mr. Solomon Arase, has said that the Nigeria Police Force is considering conducting psychiatric test on recruits and serving officers to determine their mental capabilities.
    Speaking at the Nigeria Police Force Health Policy Revalidation meeting in Abuja on Tuesday, Arase said that the initiative became necessary following incidents of indiscriminate use of firearms by personnel of the force.
    The IGP said that inadequate manpower had exposed officers to working for longer hours with attendant repercussions that calls for people with higher mental capabilities.
    Consequently, he said that the force was also considering establishing a Trauma Centre for its officers because of the nature of their job.
    “The Police should be concerned about the mental health of officers” he said.
    Recall that the IGP had advised Divisional Police Officers (DPOs) to always determine the mental awareness of officers before assigning firearms to them to curtail incidents of ‘accidental discharge`.
    He pointed out that inadequate health workers’, poor funding, infrastructure deficit and management deficiencies had been some of the challenges inhibiting the force’s medical unit.
    Arase added that in order to tackle these challenges, it was expedient to develop a health policy for the force.
    “The development of any policy document entails an inclusive approach with relevant stakeholders” he said.
    “You all have been invited here today to review the Draft Health Policy for the Nigeria Police Force,” he said.
    Minister of Health, Prof. Isaac Adewole in his address, promised the ministry’s assistance in the implementation of the policy.
    “We will assist in the implementation, we will ensure it happens”, Adewole said.
    He commended the police management for developing a health policy for its officers and their families.
    In a remark, Dr Abdulmumini Ibrahim, Registrar, Medical and Dental Council of Nigeria (MDCN), said that the policy was long overdue noting that the council would help the police to build the capacity to handle the facility.
    The Nigeria Police Medical Service was established in 1975 with the primary mandate of providing health care services to serving, retired, family members of the force and detainees.
    END