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Associations Between Specialist Tactical Response Police Unit Selection Success and Urban Rush, Along with 2.4 Km and 10 Km Loaded Carriage Events

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Publisher MDPI
Date 2019 Sep 25
PMID 31547573
Citations 4
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Abstract

Officers serving in specialist tactical response police teams are highly trained personnel who are required to carry heavy loads and perform explosive tasks. The aim of this study was to determine whether performance on a loaded explosive occupational task (urban rush) or distance-based load carriage tasks (2.4 km or 10 km) were indicative of officer success on a specialist selection course (SSC). Eighteen male police officers (mean age = 32.11 ± 5.04 years) participated in the SSC over five consecutive days. Data were categorized into Group 1 (successful applicants, n = 11) and Group 2 (unsuccessful applicants, n = 7). Independent sample -tests were performed to determine differences between groups, along with point-biserial correlations to investigate associations between anthropometric and event performance data and course completion success. Alpha levels were set at = 0.05 a priori. Height ( = 0.025), body weight ( = 0.007), and 2.4 km loaded performance ( = 0.013) were significantly different between groups, where being shorter (r(16) = -0.526, < 0.05), lighter (r(16) = -0.615, < 0.01), and faster (r(16) = -0.572, < 0.05) were associated with course success. While a loaded 2.4 km event is associated with success, a ceiling effect for an explosive anaerobic task and a longer 10 km task may exist, whereby increases in performance are not associated with selection success.

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