Objective: Subjective well-being is a crucial variable for mental health practitioners. This study examines the influence of therapists' attachment dimensions and self-reported reflective functioning on their perceived well-being. Further, it examines if reflective functioning mediates the association between attachment insecurity and well-being. Method: A total of 416 experienced psychotherapists were enrolled in this cross-sectional study, and completed self-report measures of attachment insecurity, reflective functioning, and well-being. We tested the hypothesized mediation model with path analysis that examined indirect effects. Results: Both attachment anxiety and avoidance dimensions had a significant negative association with perceived well-being with small to medium effects. "Certainty" in reflective functioning had a small positive effect on therapist well-being. Reflective functioning mediated the association between insecure attachment dimensions and well-being, suggesting that therapist's lower ability to mentalize may partially account for the effects of higher attachment insecurity on lower well-being. Conclusion: The well-being of psychotherapists with greater insecure attachment may deserve special attention, and therapists' mentalizing capacities may be targeted by researchers and trainers as a core ability to be cultivated in order to preserve therapists' professional and personal resources.

(2021). Self-reported reflective functioning mediates the association between attachment insecurity and well-being among psychotherapists [journal article - articolo]. In PSYCHOTHERAPY RESEARCH. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10446/159182

Self-reported reflective functioning mediates the association between attachment insecurity and well-being among psychotherapists

Brugnera, Agostino;Compare, Angelo;Greco, Andrea;Auteri, Adalberto;
2021-01-01

Abstract

Objective: Subjective well-being is a crucial variable for mental health practitioners. This study examines the influence of therapists' attachment dimensions and self-reported reflective functioning on their perceived well-being. Further, it examines if reflective functioning mediates the association between attachment insecurity and well-being. Method: A total of 416 experienced psychotherapists were enrolled in this cross-sectional study, and completed self-report measures of attachment insecurity, reflective functioning, and well-being. We tested the hypothesized mediation model with path analysis that examined indirect effects. Results: Both attachment anxiety and avoidance dimensions had a significant negative association with perceived well-being with small to medium effects. "Certainty" in reflective functioning had a small positive effect on therapist well-being. Reflective functioning mediated the association between insecure attachment dimensions and well-being, suggesting that therapist's lower ability to mentalize may partially account for the effects of higher attachment insecurity on lower well-being. Conclusion: The well-being of psychotherapists with greater insecure attachment may deserve special attention, and therapists' mentalizing capacities may be targeted by researchers and trainers as a core ability to be cultivated in order to preserve therapists' professional and personal resources.
articolo
2021
Brugnera, Agostino; Zarbo, Cristina; Compare, Angelo; Talia, Alessandro; Tasca, Giorgio A; de Jong, Kim; Greco, Andrea; Greco, Francesco; Pievani, Luc...espandi
(2021). Self-reported reflective functioning mediates the association between attachment insecurity and well-being among psychotherapists [journal article - articolo]. In PSYCHOTHERAPY RESEARCH. Retrieved from http://hdl.handle.net/10446/159182
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Descrizione: This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Psychotherapy Research on 20th May 2020, available online: http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/10503307.2020.1762946.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10446/159182
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