The relationship between resilience and personality traits in doctors: implications for enhancing well being

Objective. The health and well being of medical doctors is vital to their longevity and safe practice. The concept of resilience is recognised as a key component of well being and is an important factor in medical training to help doctors learn to cope with challenge, stress, and adversity. This stu...

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Main Authors: Diann S. Eley, C. Robert Cloninger, Lucie Walters, Caroline Laurence, Robyn Synnott, David Wilkinson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2013-11-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/216.pdf
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spelling doaj-f7cbd5b87a5144589105326cefad175a2020-11-25T00:12:19ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592013-11-011e21610.7717/peerj.216216The relationship between resilience and personality traits in doctors: implications for enhancing well beingDiann S. Eley0C. Robert Cloninger1Lucie Walters2Caroline Laurence3Robyn Synnott4David Wilkinson5School of Medicine, The University of Queensland, Queensland, AustraliaDepartment of Psychiatry and Sansone Centre for Well-Being, Washington University, USARural Clinical School, Flinders University, South Australia, AustraliaDiscipline of General Practice, School of Population Health and Clinical Practice, University of Adelaide, South Australia, AustraliaSchool of Medicine, The University of Queensland, Queensland, AustraliaCorporate Engagement & Advancement, Macquarie University, NSW, AustraliaObjective. The health and well being of medical doctors is vital to their longevity and safe practice. The concept of resilience is recognised as a key component of well being and is an important factor in medical training to help doctors learn to cope with challenge, stress, and adversity. This study examined the relationship of resilience to personality traits and resilience in doctors in order to identify the key traits that promote or impair resilience.Methods. A cross sectional cohort of 479 family practitioners in practice across Australia was studied. The Temperament and Character Inventory measured levels of the seven basic dimensions of personality and the Resilience Scale provided an overall measure of resilience. The associations between resilience and personality were examined by Pearson product-moment correlation coefficients, controlling for age and gender (α = 0.05 with an accompanying 95% confidence level) and multiple regression analyses.Results. Strong to medium positive correlations were found between Resilience and Self-directedness (r = .614, p < .01), Persistence (r = .498, p < .01), and Cooperativeness (r = .363, p < .01) and negative with Harm Avoidance (r = .−555, p < .01). Individual differences in personality explained 39% of the variance in resilience [F(7, 460) = 38.40, p < .001]. The three traits which contributed significantly to this variance were Self-directedness (β = .33, p < .001), Persistence (β = .22, p < .001) and Harm Avoidance (β = .19, p < .001).Conclusion. Resilience was associated with a personality trait pattern that is mature, responsible, optimistic, persevering, and cooperative. Findings support the inclusion of resilience as a component of optimal functioning and well being in doctors. Strategies for enhancing resilience should consider the key traits that drive or impair it.https://peerj.com/articles/216.pdfTemperamentResilienceCharacterWell beingDoctors
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Diann S. Eley
C. Robert Cloninger
Lucie Walters
Caroline Laurence
Robyn Synnott
David Wilkinson
spellingShingle Diann S. Eley
C. Robert Cloninger
Lucie Walters
Caroline Laurence
Robyn Synnott
David Wilkinson
The relationship between resilience and personality traits in doctors: implications for enhancing well being
PeerJ
Temperament
Resilience
Character
Well being
Doctors
author_facet Diann S. Eley
C. Robert Cloninger
Lucie Walters
Caroline Laurence
Robyn Synnott
David Wilkinson
author_sort Diann S. Eley
title The relationship between resilience and personality traits in doctors: implications for enhancing well being
title_short The relationship between resilience and personality traits in doctors: implications for enhancing well being
title_full The relationship between resilience and personality traits in doctors: implications for enhancing well being
title_fullStr The relationship between resilience and personality traits in doctors: implications for enhancing well being
title_full_unstemmed The relationship between resilience and personality traits in doctors: implications for enhancing well being
title_sort relationship between resilience and personality traits in doctors: implications for enhancing well being
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2013-11-01
description Objective. The health and well being of medical doctors is vital to their longevity and safe practice. The concept of resilience is recognised as a key component of well being and is an important factor in medical training to help doctors learn to cope with challenge, stress, and adversity. This study examined the relationship of resilience to personality traits and resilience in doctors in order to identify the key traits that promote or impair resilience.Methods. A cross sectional cohort of 479 family practitioners in practice across Australia was studied. The Temperament and Character Inventory measured levels of the seven basic dimensions of personality and the Resilience Scale provided an overall measure of resilience. The associations between resilience and personality were examined by Pearson product-moment correlation coefficients, controlling for age and gender (α = 0.05 with an accompanying 95% confidence level) and multiple regression analyses.Results. Strong to medium positive correlations were found between Resilience and Self-directedness (r = .614, p < .01), Persistence (r = .498, p < .01), and Cooperativeness (r = .363, p < .01) and negative with Harm Avoidance (r = .−555, p < .01). Individual differences in personality explained 39% of the variance in resilience [F(7, 460) = 38.40, p < .001]. The three traits which contributed significantly to this variance were Self-directedness (β = .33, p < .001), Persistence (β = .22, p < .001) and Harm Avoidance (β = .19, p < .001).Conclusion. Resilience was associated with a personality trait pattern that is mature, responsible, optimistic, persevering, and cooperative. Findings support the inclusion of resilience as a component of optimal functioning and well being in doctors. Strategies for enhancing resilience should consider the key traits that drive or impair it.
topic Temperament
Resilience
Character
Well being
Doctors
url https://peerj.com/articles/216.pdf
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