Abstract
It is widely recognised that social workers need to enhance their emotional resilience to protect their well-being in an increasingly stressful profession, but little is known about how this might be achieved. This study utilised a repeated measures wait-list controlled design to evaluate a multi-modal intervention for newly-qualified social workers employed in children’s services on levels of resilience and well-being and associated personal resources previously found to underpin resilience (i.e. emotional self efficacy, self compassion and satisfaction/fatigue and psychological flexibility). The interventions were found to yield benefits for wellbeing that were generally maintained over time.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Publication status | Published - 1 Jan 2015 |
| Event | BPS Division of Occupational Psychology Annual Conference - Glasgow Duration: 7 Jan 2015 → 9 Jan 2015 |
Conference
| Conference | BPS Division of Occupational Psychology Annual Conference |
|---|---|
| City | Glasgow |
| Period | 7/01/15 → 9/01/15 |
| Other | BPS Division of Occupational Psychology Annual Conference (07/01/2015-09/01/2015, Glasgow) |
Keywords
- social workers
- Resilience
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