Get additional information on every systematic review available for your question, studies not included in reviews, and more. Everything explained and double-checked by our experts. Faster and more comprehensive than any other option.

L·OVE builds upon a collection of around 300.000 systematic reviews coming from Epistemonikos database, the most complete in health evidence.

We have created a comprehensive map of questions relevant for health decision-making. A network of experts supported by artificial intelligence algorithms capture and validate information as soon as it is produced.

Image

Save the time you spend searching and screening. L·OVE’s artificial intelligence algorithms and a wide network of experts have done it for you.

NLERSP provides training and technical assistance to state, local, and tribal law enforcement with the goal of preventing officer injuries and fatalities on the nation’s roadways.

Make decisions based on living evidence. L·OVE notifies you of new articles and updates your evidence base on a daily basis.

Filter by Post Type All PostsAnnouncementsEventsInFocusInside Our ImpactOnPolicing BlogPress ReleasesProjectsPublications

Body-worn cameras (BWCs) have been adopted rapidly in the past ten years. There are many reasons why body cameras became popular, including increasing internal accountability, enhancing transparency, facilitating investigations of citizen complaints, and officer safety training. In January 2020, the National Policing Institute (NPI), in partnership with Arnold Ventures, co-sponsored a one-day conference, “Police Body-Worn Cameras: What Have We Learned Over Ten Years of Deployment?” It explored what we have learned about body cameras in the years since their deployment, as well as considerations for future implementation. The conference featured presentations by prominent researchers in the field and discussions with police executives based on their experience with body camera programs in their agencies. Body cameras are potentially transformative, but their use is not without complication and controversy. When departments have body camera recordings of high-profile incidents such as police shootings, members of the public often request release of the recordings to view the incidents themselves and form their own independent conclusions. Release of videos may be interpreted differently by different individuals. Many departments are also finding out that body camera programs incur high costs. The initial small investment in hardware is soon dwarfed by administrative costs and data storage costs. These costs are much of the reason that the rate of body camera adoption by law enforcement agencies has slowed in the last few years. However, public and law enforcement interest in body camera deployment remains high, and these costs have not proven to be an absolute bar to implementation.

We have created a comprehensive map of questions relevant for health decision-making. A network of experts supported by artificial intelligence algorithms capture and validate information as soon as it is produced.

The National Policing Institute was awarded the 2024 GuideStar Platinum Seal of Transparency – the highest rating for non-profit organizations. Learn more

Do you need a specific question or more evidence? Get a customized report with systematic reviews, and all of their primary studies, downloadable and shareable.

National Policing Institute. (2020). Police body cameras: What have we learned over ten years of deployment? https://www.policinginstitute.org/publication/police-body-cameras-what-have-we-learned-over-ten-years-of-deployment/

Browse our L·OVE platform, where all the health systematic reviews are organized by L·OVEs (i.e. a topic, a condition or a problem) using the PICO format (Population, Intervention, Comparisons, and Outcomes). Save questions, get notified for every time there’s new evidence, and more.

Get additional information on every systematic review available for your question, studies not included in reviews, and more. Everything explained and double-checked by our experts. Faster and more comprehensive than any other option.

Image

Browse our L·OVE platform, where all the health systematic reviews are organized by L·OVEs (i.e. a topic, a condition or a problem) using the PICO format (Population, Intervention, Comparisons, and Outcomes). Save questions, get notified for every time there’s new evidence, and more.

Image

L·OVE is the first platform that maps and organizes all of the best evidence relevant for making health decisions (i.e. systematic reviews).

L·OVE does not require training. Just go to the topic you are interested in, and get all the evidence you need.