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Understanding the influence of resilience on psychological outcomes — Comparing results from acute care nurses in Canada and Singapore

journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-06, 02:14 authored by Shin Yuh Ang, David Hemsworth, Thendral Uthaman, Tracy Carol Ayre, Siti Zubaidah Mordiffi, Emily Ang, Violeta Lopez
Background: Building resilience among nurses is one of the ways to support and retain nurses in the profession. Prior literature which evaluated influence of resilience on psychological outcomes, were conducted in relatively homogeneous populations. It is of interest to evaluate whether relationships between resilience and psychological outcomes remain consistent across nations and among different nursing populations. Aim: To evaluate a theoretical model of the impact of resilience on burnout (BO), secondary traumatic stress (STS) and compassion satisfaction (CS) by comparing results between nurses in Canada and Singapore. Method: A self-reported questionnaire consisting of questions on demographics, resilience (Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale), and psychological adjustment (Professional Quality of Life) was administered via an online survey. One thousand three hundred and thirty-eight nurses working in two Academic Medical Centres in Singapore responded to the online survey. Similar data was also collected from 329 nurses in Canada. Hypotheses were tested using structural equation modeling. Results: Resilience exerts a significant negative direct impact on STS, and a significant negative direct impact on BO. Additionally, resilience has a positive direct impact on compassion satisfaction. STS exerts a positive direct impact on BO while CS has a negative direct impact on BO. Conclusion: Current study affirmed significant associations between resilience and professional quality of life. Knowledge on resilience is key in informing design and implementation of resilience-building strategies that include professional development, and strengthening of interpersonal skills. A resilience-based approach will help reduce nurses' BO and STS while caring for their patients, and in turn reduce turnover.

History

Volume

43

Start Page

105

End Page

113

Number of Pages

9

eISSN

1532-8201

ISSN

0897-1897

Publisher

Elsevier

Language

en

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Acceptance Date

2018-07-25

External Author Affiliations

Singapore General Hospital; Nipissing University, Canada; National University Health System

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Medium

Print-Electronic

Journal

Applied Nursing Research

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