Association of resilience and psychological flexibility with surgeons’ mental wellbeing
Maddy Greville-Harris, Catherine Withers, Agata Wezyk, Kevin Thomas, Helen Bolderston, Amy Kane, Sine McDougall, Kevin J Turner

TL;DR
This study shows that psychological flexibility and resilience, not just personality traits, influence surgeons' mental health and can be improved through interventions.
Contribution
The study identifies psychological flexibility and resilience as key, malleable mediators between personality traits and mental health in surgeons.
Findings
Psychological flexibility and resilience significantly mediated the relationship between personality traits and mental health outcomes.
These psychological skills can be targeted through interventions to improve surgeons' mental wellbeing.
Personality traits alone do not fully explain surgeons' mental health.
Abstract
Existing research highlights the link between certain personality traits and mental health in surgeons. However, little research has explored the important role of psychological skills and qualities in potentially explaining this link. A cross-sectional survey of UK-based surgeons was used to examine whether two such skills (psychological flexibility and resilience) helped to explain why certain personality traits might be linked to mental health in surgeons. An online survey comprising measures of personality (neuroticism, extraversion and conscientiousness), psychological skills/qualities (psychological flexibility and resilience) and mental health (depression, anxiety, stress and burnout) was sent to surgeons practising in the UK. Mediation analyses were used to examine the potential mediating role of psychological flexibility and resilience in explaining the relationship between…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealthcare professionals’ stress and burnout · Resilience and Mental Health · Perfectionism, Procrastination, Anxiety Studies
