LawFit History
From time
to time law enforcement requires sudden, strenuous exertion and
exceptional physical performance. During an emergency an officer
is required to use large muscle groups and related connective
tissues in such activities as pursuit, arrest, and restrain of
suspects, victim extrication and rescue, high-speed motor vehicle
operation, and the use of a variety of firearms and non-lethal
weapons. The stresses placed on the various muscle groups are,
in turn, transferred to the cardiovascular system (i.e. heart,
lungs, and blood vessels). Researchers have noted that, even in
controlled police training exercises, officers' heart rates commonly
exceed 90 percent of their maximum until the activity is completed.
Consistently, an officer's pulse will go above 170 beats per minute
during these situations.
Although law
enforcement activities can be extremely physically demanding from
time to time, a majority of the job-related duties of officers
can be characterized as sedentary in nature (i.e. vehicle patrol,
investigative activity, paper work, public education, courtroom
and detention facility monitoring). Such tasks are not conductive
to the maintenance of a high level of physical fitness. In fact,
the combination of intermittent, sudden, strenuous exertion and
a basically sedentary work environment is responsible for a significant
number of on-the-job injuries and illnesses in law enforcement.
An additional
impetus to examine the health and fitness of public safety personnel
has been the increase in litigation concerning officer use of
force. The courts have held agencies responsible when officers
who were not physically fit utilized lethal weapons in subduing
unarmed suspects. In (Parker v. District of Columbia, 1988) the
police department was held liable for the wrongful death of an
unarmed citizen who was resisting arrest. Considering the officer's
lack of fitness and conditioning, the court stated it was apparent
that the most effective method the officer had in subduing the
suspect was the use of a firearm, instead of the application of
physical force. The court further found a deliberate indifference
on the part of the police department with respect to adequately
maintaining officers' levels of fitness, thus resulting in a forseeable
risk to others.
Unless law
enforcement agencies are willing to place sufficient emphasis
on developing and maintaining fitness levels which allow their
personnel to perform effectively in high-stress situations, they
will be faced with on-going disability claims from officers in
less than optimal condition who are injured in the line of duty.
It has been estimated that a municipality may have to pay as much
as $400,000 more for a "disability" retirement than
a "normal" retirement. Additionally, these agencies
will be vulnerable to lawsuits when their less fit personnel are
unable to perform their policing duties in a manner that protects
the safety and welfare of the general public.
In response
to a growing concern for the disabling illnesses and injuries
suffered by their personnel, Police Departments and Sheriff's
Departments in Virginia began to address the issue of officer
health and safety in the late 1980's. In November of 1989 Dr.
David L. Bever, a professor of health education at George Mason
University, developed the LawFit® Program for law enforcement
personnel. This program was designed to increase the cardiorespiratory
efficiency, muscular strength, muscular endurance, lean body mass,
and flexibility of officers. Personnel from participating departments
completed an initial battery of tests to measure their levels
of fitness. These tests included:
- One repetition-maximum
bench press
- 1 minute
timed sit-up test
- Sit &
reach flexibility test
- Push-ups
- Pull-ups
- 1.5 mile
run
- Body fat
estimation
- Resting
heart rate
- Blood
pressure
These tests
were selected, since they have been found to be good predictors
of the five major areas of fitness (aerobic capacity, muscular
strength, muscular endurance, flexibility, and body composition).
Since the
inception of LawFit® there has been a highly significant increase
in the levels of fitness of officers who have participated. With
this increase in fitness there has been a reduction in lost-worktime
injuries and workers' compensation claims. Additionally, participating
departments have noted that when officers have been injured in
the line of duty they have recovered more quickly than those not
participating in the program.
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