News and Articles
Are you at risk of burning out?
Burnout is being increasingly talked about across the community, and particularly in the health professions. Research shows that 1 in 4 dental practitioners have symptoms consistent with burnout. It’s common to hear people now talking about how they have burned out or are feeling burnt out. So we need understand what burnout is, and what it is not.
You Are Not Your Errors – using Learned Optimism to reset.
Learned Optimism is a strategic way of thinking that can be taught and developed in individuals. It focuses on disputing or challenging those thoughts to better serve us, our wellbeing, and our careers. If you find yourself thinking, “This is ruining my whole life”, ask yourself, “Really? Is this event really ruining my whole life or is it just impacting a specific part of my life, my work, my day?”.
Mental health and wellbeing across career stages
Dentistry is a stressful profession, with stressors including time and scheduling pressures, striving for perfection, fear of litigation, anxious patients, demanding and unrealistic patient expectations (particularly meeting aesthetic needs), business pressures, staffing problems, regulatory demands and negative perceptions of the dental profession. It can also be an isolating profession despite there often being a large number of staff in the workplace.
Mindful starts: navigating work for new graduates
Many new graduates will be embarking on their first weeks in dental practice, with a range of emotions – excited, scared, anxious and hopeful. It’s important to remember that this is a path well-trodden – every dental practitioner who supervised you at dental school, acted as a mentor or who is now your employer – embarked on this same journey.
New year, new habits?
The new year is often a time for reflection on the year that has passed, and a focus on the year ahead. The transition from one year to the next is more than just turning a page in the calendar – it can be a strong symbolic moment that acknowledges the passing of time and the capacity for our continued growth and improvement.
12 days of Christmas wellbeing
Whilst the holiday period is an opportunity for people to unwind and relax, for many people it can be a period of great stress and anxiety. Rather than an opportunity to release the pressure valve, some people put additional pressure on themselves to create the perfect Christmas dinner or holiday experience.
Comparison is the thief of joy.
Comparison is the thief of joy. So said Theodore Roosevelt. And he’s got a point. When we compare ourselves to others, using them as a yardstick, it literally steals away the satisfaction we should feel in our own life.
Proactive Resilience
If we consider resilience to be the capacity or ability to recover from difficulties, proactive resilience – or ‘prosilience’ – is the steps we can take to develop, deepen or embed our emotional and mental capacity to recover, before this resilience is needed.
The curse of perfectionism
Perfect is the enemy of the good. but knowing when something is good enough can be a challenge.
Work-life balance
No-one at the end of their life ever wishes that they had spent more time at work. So don’t.