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First Responder Wellness Week is dedicated to providing resources, support and community to help public safety personnel better understand the mental and physical health risks that come with the job.

Join Lexipol, Corrections1 and our partners from March 23-27, 2026, to focus on your health and promote the wellness of your personnel. Each day we’ll focus on a different theme, providing shift briefing videos, webinars, articles, podcasts and more.

SPONSORED BY
Join us for a week of daily sessions focused on strengthening wellness across your agency. Reserve your seat today.
  • When Something Hurts: Smart, Sustainable Recovery
  • 5 Daily Habits to Sustain Wellness
  • Wellness: Steering the Gray Rhino
  • Building Wellness, Not Just Bolting It On
  • “Asking for a Friend” - LIVE!
COMPLETE COVERAGE
A structured peer support model designed for correctional officers to address chronic stress, reduce stigma and strengthen workforce resilience
A strong wellness policy moves beyond good intentions, building clear, accessible systems that support personnel before, during and after stress and critical incidents
Because if we can’t laugh about it, we’ll never deal with it; and if we don’t deal with it, it’ll keep dealing with us — on patrol, at the console or in the middle of a 10-hour shift
Emotional intelligence is a tactical psychology that helps corrections officers detect stress early, regulate reactions under pressure and protect their mental health
First Responder Wellness Week brings together practical strategies to help officers stay sharp, resilient and ready for the job
Free webinars and daily wellness resources will address injury recovery, mental health, resilience and agency wellness strategy
Which of these viral TikTok fitness trends will you try next?
It’s time to match praise with policy for those on the front lines
This conversation delves into the importance of proactive brain care, leadership resilience and the future of AI in healthcare
From sleep divorce to sleep apnea, Dr. Leah Kaylor explains how officers can fix hidden sleep killers that put safety and performance at risk