Module 2: Building Personal Resilience & Emotional Regulation
- Description
- Curriculum
- Reviews
Personal Resilience & Emotional Regulation Domain Description
Personal resilience and emotional regulation in healthcare imply the dynamic processes by which professionals maintain psychological flexibility, regulate emotional responses, and restore balance following demanding clinical situations. The area includes the neurophysiology of stress activation and recovery, evidence-based emotional regulation strategies, early warning sign recognition, assertive boundary communication, micro-recovery practices, and the development of personalised self-care plans realistic within high-demand healthcare schedules.
Healthcare professionals operate in emotionally demanding and structurally pressured environments. Chronic stress, emotional labor, and limited recovery time increase the risk of burnout, compassion fatigue, and emotional detachment.
This module introduces participants to the mechanisms of stress and burnout using the three-phase burnout model (alarm–resistance–exhaustion). Participants learn to identify structural, emotional, and organizational contributors to overload and distinguish between healthy stress and harmful chronic strain.
The session focuses on practical emotional regulation tools, early warning signs, and boundary-setting skills that can be applied during shifts. Participants develop a realistic, role-sensitive self-care plan supported by a digital self-care planner. Through case discussion, peer exchange, and guided reflection, the module promotes resilience not as endurance, but as adaptive recovery capacity.
The aim is not to individualize systemic problems, but to strengthen coping skills while recognizing structural responsibility.
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1Introduction
Personal Resilience & Emotional Regulation Domain Description
Personal resilience and emotional regulation in healthcare imply the dynamic processes by which professionals maintain psychological flexibility, regulate emotional responses, and restore balance following demanding clinical situations. The area includes the neurophysiology of stress activation and recovery, evidence-based emotional regulation strategies, early warning sign recognition, assertive boundary communication, micro-recovery practices, and the development of personalised self-care plans realistic within high-demand healthcare schedules.
Healthcare professionals operate in emotionally demanding and structurally pressured environments. Chronic stress, emotional labor, and limited recovery time increase the risk of burnout, compassion fatigue, and emotional detachment.
This module introduces participants to the mechanisms of stress and burnout using the three-phase burnout model (alarm–resistance–exhaustion). Participants learn to identify structural, emotional, and organizational contributors to overload and distinguish between healthy stress and harmful chronic strain.
The session focuses on practical emotional regulation tools, early warning signs, and boundary-setting skills that can be applied during shifts. Participants develop a realistic, role-sensitive self-care plan supported by a digital self-care planner. Through case discussion, peer exchange, and guided reflection, the module promotes resilience not as endurance, but as adaptive recovery capacity.
The aim is not to individualize systemic problems, but to strengthen coping skills while recognizing structural responsibility.
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2Lesson 1: Building Personal Resilience and Emotional Regulation in Healthcare Contexts
Healthcare professionals operate in environments characterized by sustained cognitive demand, emotional intensity, ethical complexity, and structural constraints. Research consistently demonstrates elevated levels of occupational stress and burnout across healthcare roles (WHO, 2019; OECD/European Commission, 2024). While Module 1 addressed the conceptualization and phases of burnout, the present module focuses on the protective mechanisms that mitigate its development: personal resilience and emotional regulation.
Resilience in this context is defined not as resistance to stress, but as adaptive recovery capacity — the ability to maintain psychological flexibility, regulate emotional responses, and restore equilibrium following demanding situations (Southwick et al., 2014). It is increasingly understood as a dynamic process shaped by individual skills and environmental factors rather than a fixed personality trait.
Module Delivery Specifications
• Duration: 100-110 minutes (adaptable to two 50’-55’ minutes sessions)
• Format: Interactive workshop combining didactic content, case analysis, self-reflection and videos.
• Materials: Self-assessment worksheets, script card, scenario cards, Feedback sheet, habit tracker, reflection sheet
• Follow-up Integration: Monthly check-in reminders, Single-Item Stress Scale (SISS), Shortened Maslach Emotional Exhaustion Subscale, Habit Tracker / Self-Care Log, reflective prompt journal.
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3Assessment