A qualitative exploration of neophyte sport psychology practitioners self-care experiences and perceptions
Scholars from the psychology and mental health professions have previously identified the value of self-care for enhancing practitioners personal and professional well-being, and fitness to practice. Despite these advances, self-care in sport psychology practitioners has received limited attention f...
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Published in | Journal of applied sport psychology Vol. 35; no. 5; pp. 874 - 896 |
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Main Authors | , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Philadelphia
Routledge
01.09.2023
Taylor & Francis Ltd |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Scholars from the psychology and mental health professions have previously identified the value of self-care for enhancing practitioners personal and professional well-being, and fitness to practice. Despite these advances, self-care in sport psychology practitioners has received limited attention from scholars, with the few extant studies investigating senior practitioners' self-care. As such, there currently exists little understanding of how neophyte practitioners understand, experience and enact self-care. In the current study, we aimed to better understand SPP self-care early in individuals' professional development. Grounded in ontological relativism, we recruited 18 self-identified white neophyte SPPs residing in the United Kingdom (12 females and 6 males), aged between 24 and 52 years (M
age
= 31.94, SD
age
= 7.81), to take part in semi-structured interviews in which we explored their experiences of enacting self-care during their training. Five main themes were constructed following a reflexive thematic analysis of data. These themes were: (a) What self-care means to neophyte SPPs, (b) The cornerstones of self-care, (c) What facilitates neophyte's self-care, (d) The self-care hurdles that neophytes face and (e) The self-care actions that neophytes implement. These findings contribute to the nascent body of literature exploring self-care within SPP populations and serve to better illuminate neophyte SPPs' understanding of self-care and how they perceive their interactions with the profession to impact their ability to enact self-care. The current lack of emphasis on self-care in SPP training pathways and employment settings as well as key considerations for the development of greater self-care awareness within current and future neophyte cohorts is discussed.
Lay summary: In this study we explored the self-care experiences of 18 neophyte Sport Psychology Practitioners (SPPs). Analysis of interview data identified the meaning of self-care to neophyte SPPs, the key mechanisms, such as self-awareness, that underpin self-care as well as the facilitating and challenging aspects related to engaging in self-care.
APPLIED IMPLICATIONS
Neophyte sport psychology practitioners perceive engaging in self-care to be of benefit to a positive work-life balance and their holistic development.
The development of mechanisms such as self-awareness and psychological flexibility in one's self-care practices may be beneficial to promoting effective self-care for neophytes.
Greater efforts from employing organizations, regulatory bodies and educational institutions are needed to better communicate the importance of self-care during training. |
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ISSN: | 1041-3200 1533-1571 |
DOI: | 10.1080/10413200.2022.2046659 |