Evidence supports the effectiveness of self-reflective training approaches for the development of resilience. Building this work, the objective of this study was to investigate the impact of the focus of coping self-reflective activities on resilience by applying a self-reflection approach to a sample of 254 Australian ministry workers. This randomized controlled trial included three attention-matched conditions: (1) self-reflective writing focused on successful coping, (2) self-reflective writing focused on unsuccessful coping or (3) written descriptions of stressor events alone. Participants were assessed across four time points: prior to, immediately post, 3-months, and 6-months after the intervention. Results demonstrated that self-reflective writing was more effective in enhancing perceived resilience than descriptive writing. Analyses also showed greater maintenance of beneficial effects in the successful self-reflection condition, compared to the unsuccessful condition. These findings support the use of self-reflection training to strengthen individuals' psychological resilience, particularly when focused on successful coping situations for those who initially experience more ruminative thought.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/smi.3311 | DOI Listing |
Eur J Gen Pract
December 2024
Faculty of Medical Sciences, Population Health Sciences Institute, Newcastle University, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK.
Objective: To explore how it feels to be a burnt out GP in the NHS.
Design: In depth qualitative interviews with 16 UK GPs with self-declared 'lived experience' of burnout.
Setting: United Kingdom Primary Care.
Stress Health
April 2024
Centre for Elite Performance, Expertise and Training, School of Psychological Sciences, Macquarie University, North Ryde, New South Wales, Australia.
Evidence supports the effectiveness of self-reflective training approaches for the development of resilience. Building this work, the objective of this study was to investigate the impact of the focus of coping self-reflective activities on resilience by applying a self-reflection approach to a sample of 254 Australian ministry workers. This randomized controlled trial included three attention-matched conditions: (1) self-reflective writing focused on successful coping, (2) self-reflective writing focused on unsuccessful coping or (3) written descriptions of stressor events alone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Educ Online
December 2023
Department of Applied Foreign Languages, Chung Shan Medical University, Taichung, Taiwan.
Background: Narrative medicine can serve as a tool to empathize with human beings' predicament and suffering. The research intended to examine whether the use of narrative medicine to form an empathetic connection could bring any positive impacts on health professions students.
Methods: A two-group quasi-experimental design was adopted to examine whether the intervention of narrative medicine to form an empathetic connection could demonstrate differences between the experimental group (35 students) and the control group (32 students) with regard to professional identity, self-reflection, emotional catharsis, and reflective writing competency.
Front Public Health
April 2023
Department of Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine Universitas Indonesia, Cipto Mangunkusumo National Central Referral Hospital, Jakarta, Indonesia.
Background: The COVID-19 pandemic has encouraged adaptations of learning methods in clinical clerkship. There have been limited reports on the merits of involving medical students in telemedicine. This study, therefore, aims to investigate students' reflection on what they learned and identify the challenges and benefits of doctor-patient interaction through their experience in a telemedicine-based course.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychodyn Psychiatry
September 2022
Medical Director, Mindpath Health Mind-Brain-Body Center, and a Consulting Associate Professor, Duke Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences. A version of this manuscript was presented as the Ernest Svenson Memorial Lecture, New Orleans, Louisiana, in September 2018, and at the AAPDPP Annual Meeting in San Francisco, California, in May 2019.
Despite Tennessee Williams's genius as a playwright who could represent his inner emotional struggles in his art, psychoanalysis was unable to free him from the powerful "blue devils" within him. Williams's inability to engage with psychoanalysis presents an opportunity to discuss ways that contemporary thinking about brain structure and function might guide our understanding and treatment of patients such as Williams. One of the core defensive behaviors that made analysis difficult for Williams was his avoidance of painful emotions through compulsive writing, sex, alcohol, and drug-addictive behaviors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!