What is Resilience?
The University of Melbourne · Mental Health Australia · +5 more institutions
Abstract
While everyone-including front-line clinicians-should strive to prevent the maltreatment and other severe stresses experienced by many children and adults in everyday life, psychiatrists and other health professionals also need to consider how best to support, throughout the lifespan, those people affected by severe adversity. The first step in achieving this is a clear understanding of the definitions and concepts in the rapidly growing study of resilience. Our paper reviews the definitions of resilience and the range of factors understood as contributing to it, and considers some of the implications for clinical care and public health. METHOD: This narrative review took a major Canadian report published in 2006 as its starting point. The databases, MEDLINE and PsycINFO, were searched for new relevant citations from 2006 up to July 2010 to identify key papers considering the definitions of resilience and related concepts.
Definitions have evolved over time but fundamentally resilience is understood as referring to positive adaptation, or the ability to maintain or regain mental health, despite experiencing adversity. The personal, biological, and environmental or systemic sources of resilience and their interaction are considered. An interactive model of resilience illustrates the factors that enhance or reduce homeostasis or resilience.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 39.50
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 55
Authors
6- HHHelen HerrmanCorresponding
The University of Melbourne, Mental Health Australia
- DEDonna E. Stewart
University Health Network, University of Toronto
- NDNatalia Diaz-Granados
University Health Network, McMaster University
- ELElena L. Berger
World Federation for Mental Health
- BJBeth Jackson
Public Health Agency of Canada
Topics & keywords
- PsycINFO
- Psychology
- Psychological resilience
- Resilience (materials science)
- Mental health
- Narrative
- Adaptation (eye)
- MEDLINE