Benefits of body armor outweigh cost for police officers: study

Providing body armor to all police officers would save at least eight lives a year, suggests research from Santa Monica, CA-based Rand Corp.

According to a study abstract, researchers conducted an analysis of 561 line-of-duty shootings between 2004 and 2007 and found police officers who were not wearing body armor had a 68 percent chance of dying, compared with a 20 percent chance for those wearing armor, according to a Rand press release.

About 75 percent of police officers work in departments requiring use of body armor. Outfitting the 236,000 officers who do not have body armor would cost roughly $26 million a year, but would produce an economic value of $51 million in terms of lives saved, the release said.

The study appears in the October issue of the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Hygiene.



Post a comment to this article

Safety+Health welcomes comments that promote respectful dialogue. Please stay on topic. Comments that contain personal attacks, profanity or abusive language – or those aggressively promoting products or services – will be removed. We reserve the right to determine which comments violate our comment policy. (Anonymous comments are welcome; merely skip the “name” field in the comment box. An email address is required but will not be included with your comment.)