Role of Resilience in Mindfullness Training for First Responders

Kaplan, J.B.; Bergman, A.L.; Christopher, M.; Bowen, S.; Hunsinger, M.

Role of Resilience in Mindfullness Training for First Responders

Kaplan, J.B.; Bergman, A.L.; Christopher, M.; Bowen, S.; Hunsinger, M.

Abstract

First responders are exposed to critical incidents and chronic stressors that contribute to a higher prevalence of negative health outcomes compared to other occupations. Psychological resilience, a learnable process of positive adaptation to stress, has been identified as a protective factor against the negative impact of burnout. Mindfulness-Based Resilience Training (MBRT) is a preventive intervention tailored for first responders to reduce negative health outcomes, such as burnout. This study is a secondary analysis of law enforcement and firefighters samples to examine the mechanistic role of psychological resilience on burnout. Results indicated that changes in resilience partially mediated the relationship between mindfulness and burnout, and that increased mindfulness was related to increased resilience (b = .41, SE = .11, p< .01), which in turn was related to decreased burnout (b = −.25, SE = .12, p = .03). The bootstrapped confidence interval of the indirect effect did not contain zero [95% CI; −.27, −.01], providing evidence for mediation. Limitations and implications are discussed.

This resource is found in our Actionable Strategies for Public Safety Organizations: Actionable Strategies (Mental Health & Stress/Trauma Supports)

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Mindfulness (N Y)
2017
Profession(s)
Emergency Response Workers
Police
Topic(s)
Burnout
Resource Types
Peer-Reviewed Research
Study Type(s)
Nonrandomized Trial (inc. Intervention Studies)
Action Strategy Area(s)
Physical & Mental Health
Setting(s)
Community
Academic Role(s)
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