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Bournemouth University Resilience Training for Surgeons

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Effect of Training
Interventions
Behavioral: ACTr (Acceptance and Commitment Training)
Registration Number
NCT03759795
Lead Sponsor
Bournemouth University
Brief Summary

The challenges that characterise surgical practice may result in a myriad of stressors that impact upon the personal and professional lives of surgeons. This includes a high likelihood that surgeons will have to deal with adverse patient outcomes due to surgical complications and errors, sometime during their careers. Such stressors can have undesirable effects on the surgeon in terms of quality of life and psychological well-being (e.g. anxiety, feelings of regret), as well as lowered professional confidence and impaired perceptions of professional competence. Furthermore, there is evidence that these kinds of negative impacts can also lead to burnout and depression. As well as the detrimental effects on surgeons and those around them, this in turn may lead to more errors and poorer outcomes for patients. This study will examine the efficacy of an ACT based training intervention to enhance resilience and psychological flexibility.

Detailed Description

Research in a range of occupational settings has indicated that resilience plays an important role in ameliorating the impact of adverse events in high pressure environments. This project will use a randomised controlled trial research design to assess the efficacy of brief one-to-one Acceptance and Commitment Training (ACTr), designed to enhance surgeons' psychological resilience. According to the model ACTr is based on, psychopathology is primarily the consequence of psychological inflexibility i.e. inability to persist or change behaviour according to long-term values due to language and cognition skills, which has particular significance when an individual is confronted with stress or adversity.

The main aim of this research is to assess the efficacy of a brief one-to-one Acceptance and Commitment Training course. Researchers wish to ascertain whether such a course can increase surgeons' resilience by increasing psychological flexibility, valuing and self-compassion (all of which are expected to be positively impacted by this training). This research will fill a gap in the relevant research literature; namely that no research project as far as we are aware has evaluated ACTr as a means to enhance resilience in surgeons. In fact any research conducted on resilience training with a surgical population is rare.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
68
Inclusion Criteria

Trainee surgeons and consultant surgeons

Exclusion Criteria

None

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Intervention GroupACTr (Acceptance and Commitment Training)Acceptance and Commitment Training (ACTr)
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Resilience - Brief Resilience Scale (BRS)20 weeks

A self-report measure of psychological resilience. Higher values represent a better outcome.

General Health - General Health Questionnaire (GHQ-12).20 weeks

A self reported measure of minor psychological symptomology in a non-clinical population.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
CBI (Copenhagen Burnout Inventory)20 weeks

A self-report measure of vulnerability to burnout. Lower values represent a better outcome.

DASS21 (Depression Anxiety and Stress Scale)20 weeks

A self-report measure of depression, stress and anxiety. Lower values represent a better outcome.

VLQ (Value Living Questionnaire)20 weeks

A self-report measure of valuing. Higher values represent a better outcome.

WAAQ (Work related Acceptance and Action Questionnaire)20 weeks

A self-report measure of work related psychological flexibility. Higher values represent a better outcome.

AAQII (Acceptance and Action Questionnaire)20 weeks

A self-report measure of general psychological inflexibility. Lower values represent a better outcome.

SCS (Self Compassion Scale)20 weeks

A self-report measure of self compassion. Higher values represent a better outcome.

SPS (Sense of Preparedness Scale)20 weeks

A self-report measure of preparedness for potential future events. Higher values represent a better outcome.

Trial Locations

Locations (2)

Royal Bournemouth and Christchurch Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust

🇬🇧

Bournemouth, United Kingdom

Poole Hopsital

🇬🇧

Poole, United Kingdom

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