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    <front>
        <journal-meta>
            <journal-id journal-id-type="publisher-id">clinsa</journal-id>
            <journal-title-group>
                <journal-title>Clínica y Salud</journal-title>
                <abbrev-journal-title abbrev-type="publisher">Clínica y Salud</abbrev-journal-title>
            </journal-title-group>
            <issn pub-type="epub">2174-0550</issn>
            <issn pub-type="ppub">1130-5274</issn>
            <publisher>
                <publisher-name>Colegio Oficial de la Psicología de Madrid</publisher-name>
            </publisher>
        </journal-meta>
        <article-meta>
            <article-id pub-id-type="doi">10.5093/clysa2020a8</article-id>
            <article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">00003</article-id>
                        <article-id pub-id-type="other">00003</article-id>
            <article-categories>
                <subj-group subj-group-type="heading">
                    <subject>research-article</subject>
                </subj-group>
            </article-categories>
            <title-group>
                <article-title>Burnout in Mental Health Professionals: The Roles of Psychological Flexibility, Awareness, Courage, and Love</article-title>
                <trans-title-group xml:lang="es">
                    <trans-title>El burnout en los profesionales de salud mental: el papel de la flexibilidad psicológica, la conciencia, la valentía y el amor</trans-title>
                </trans-title-group>
            </title-group>
            <contrib-group>
                <contrib contrib-type="author">
                    <name>
                        <surname>Ortiz-Fune</surname>
                        <given-names>Carmen</given-names>
                    </name>
                    <xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff01">a</xref>
                    <xref ref-type="corresp" rid="c01">*</xref>
                </contrib>
                <contrib contrib-type="author">
                    <name>
                        <surname>Kanter</surname>
                        <given-names>Jonathan W.</given-names>
                    </name>
                    <xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff02">b</xref>
                </contrib>
                <contrib contrib-type="author">
                    <name>
                        <surname>Arias</surname>
                        <given-names>María F.</given-names>
                    </name>
                    <xref ref-type="aff" rid="aff03">c</xref>
                </contrib>
            </contrib-group>
            <aff id="aff01">
                <label>a</label>
                <institution content-type="orgname">Complejo Asistencial de Zamora</institution>
                <institution content-type="normalized">Complejo Asistencial de Zamora</institution>
                <country country="ES">Spain</country>
                <institution content-type="original">Servicio de Psiquiatría y Salud Mental, Complejo Asistencial de Zamora, Spain</institution>
            </aff>
            <aff id="aff02">
                <label>b</label>
                <institution content-type="orgname">University of Washington</institution>
                <institution content-type="normalized">University of Washington</institution>
                <addr-line>
                    <named-content content-type="city">Seattle</named-content>
                    <named-content content-type="state">WA</named-content>
                </addr-line>
                <country country="US">USA</country>
                <institution content-type="original">University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA</institution>
            </aff>
            <aff id="aff03">
                <label>c</label>
                <institution content-type="orgname">University of Seville</institution>
                 <institution content-type="normalized">University of Seville</institution>
                <country country="ES">Spain</country>
                <institution content-type="original">University of Seville, Spain</institution>
            </aff>
            <author-notes>
                <corresp id="c01">Correspondence: <email>marortfun@gmail.com</email> (C. Ortiz-Fune)</corresp>
                <fn fn-type="conflict" id="fn01">
                    <p>Conflict of Interest</p>
                    <p>The authors of this article declare no conflict of interest.</p>
                </fn>
            </author-notes>
            <pub-date pub-type="epub-ppub">
                <!--day>15</day>
                <month>6</month>
                <year>2020</year>
            </pub-date>
            <pub-date pub-type="collection">
                <month>6</month-->
               <season>May-Aug</season> 
                <year>2020</year>
            </pub-date>
            <volume>31</volume>
            <issue>2</issue>
            <fpage>85</fpage>
            <lpage>90</lpage>
            <history>
                <date date-type="received">
                    <day>15</day>
                    <month>01</month>
                    <year>2020</year>
                </date>
                <date date-type="accepted">
                    <day>30</day>
                    <month>03</month>
                    <year>2020</year>
                </date>
            </history>
            <permissions>
                <license license-type="open-access" xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/" xml:lang="en">
                    <license-p>This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial No Derivative License, which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium provided the original work is properly cited and the work is not changed in any way.</license-p>
                </license>
            </permissions>
            <abstract>
                <title>ABSTRACT</title>
                <p>The predominant model of burnout posits three dimensions: emotional exhustion (EE), depersonalization (D), and (a lack of) personal accomplishment (PA). To date, contextual behavioral approaches have explored the role of psychological flexibility within this model of burnout but has not focused on the role of interpersonal variables, such as suggested by the Awareness, Courage, and Love (ACL) model of Functional Analytic Psychotherapy. In this study, 269 Spanish mental health workers completed a questionnaire study exploring the unique contribution of ACL, over and above psychological flexibility, to understanding burnout. Results indicated that psychological flexibility predicted all three dimensions of burnout. Regarding ACL, love was the strongest predictor of D over and above psychological flexibility and all three ACL dimensions contributed to PA prediction. We briefly present a contextual-behavioral model that integrates these findings with implications for improving interventions to reduce burnout in mental health practitioners.</p>
            </abstract>
            <trans-abstract xml:lang="es">
                <title>RESUMEN</title>
                <p>El modelo predominante del <italic>burnout</italic> asume tres dimensiones: agotamiento emocional (AE), despersonalización (D) y (falta de) logro personal (LP). Hasta la fecha, enfoques conductuales-contextuales han explorado el papel de la flexibilidad psicológica en el <italic>burnout</italic>, pero no el rol de variables interpersonales como las del modelo Consciencia, valentía y amor (ACL, por sus siglas en inglés) de la psicoterapia analítica funcional. En este estudio, 269 trabajadores españoles de salud mental cumplimentaron un formulario que exploraba la contribución del ACL, más allá de la flexibilidad psicológica, para comprender el <italic>burnout</italic>. Los resultados principales muestran que la flexibilidad psicológica predice las tres dimensiones del <italic>burnout</italic>. Con respecto al modelo ACL, el amor fue el predictor más fuerte de D, después de la flexibilidad psicológica; las tres dimensiones del ACL contribuyen a predecir el LP. En este trabajo se presenta brevemente un modelo conductual-contextual que integra estos hallazgos y sus implicaciones para mejorar las intervenciones para reducir el <italic>burnout</italic> en profesionales de salud mental.</p>
            </trans-abstract>
            <kwd-group xml:lang="en">
                <title>Keywords</title>
                <kwd>Burnout</kwd>
                <kwd>Psychological flexibility</kwd>
                <kwd>Awareness</kwd>
                <kwd>Courage</kwd>
                <kwd>Love</kwd>
            </kwd-group>
            <kwd-group xml:lang="es">
                <title>Palabras clave</title>
                <kwd>Burnout</kwd>
                <kwd>Flexibilidad psicológica</kwd>
                <kwd>Conciencia</kwd>
                <kwd>Valentía</kwd>
                <kwd>Amor</kwd>
            </kwd-group>
            <counts>
                <fig-count count="0"/>
                <table-count count="5"/>
                <equation-count count="0"/>
                <ref-count count="35"/>
                <page-count count="6"/>
            </counts>
        </article-meta>
    </front>
    <body>
        <sec sec-type="intro">
            <title>Introduction</title>
        <p>The burntout phenomenon has been well-studied in psychology and is receiving increasing attention from contextual-behavioral approaches. In the dominant model of burnout, which has garnered much empirical support (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B24">Maslach et al., 2001</xref>), burnout comprises three dimensions: emotional exhaustion (EE; being emotionally overextended and depleted), depersonalization (D; feeling negative, callous, and excessively detached from clients and customers), and lack of personal accomplishment (PA; feeling incompetent and lacking experiences of success and achievement). Consistent with contextual-behavioral emphases, burnout is considered to be a syndrome involving these three dimensions, mutually influenced by contextual and individual variables (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B22">Maslach &amp; Goldberg, 1998</xref>). Although burnout is a problem across many professions (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B24">Maslach et al., 2001</xref>), it may be a significant problem for those in medical and mental health professions who have continuous contact with human suffering (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B08">Grau et al., 2009</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B27">Ortega-Ruiz &amp; López-Rios, 2004</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B31">Romani &amp; Ashkar, 2014</xref>). In these contexts, depersonalization specifically may have important negative consequences for professionals and their clients.</p>
        <p>A recent meta-analysis on the effectiveness of interventions to reduce burnout suggested that various interventions result in significant though modest reductions in emotional exhaustion but do not affect depersonalization or personal accomplishment (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B21">Maricuoiu et al., 2016</xref>). Interestingly, only one intervention, focused on teaching &ldquo;soft&rdquo; interpersonal skills, successfully improved feelings of personal accomplishment (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B25">Mackenzie &amp; Peragine, 2003</xref>). A systematic review of burnout interventions with mental health workers similarly found no effectiveness of interventions on personal accomplishment (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B05">Dreison et al., 2018</xref>).</p>
        <p>Contextual-behavioral interventions focusing on psychological flexibility&mdash;the primary target of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B10">Hayes et al., 2009</xref>)&mdash;have promise for reducing burnout. Psychological flexibility (PF) refers to one&rsquo;s ability to mindfully stay in contact with the present moment and act according to one&rsquo;s values, even when one is experiencing unpleasant thoughts, emotions, and bodily sensations (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B02">Bond et al., 2011</xref>). PF sits on the positive end of a continuum with experiential avoidance, or the tendency to act to reduce unpleasant thoughts, emotions, and bodily sensations, even when doing so causes harm in the long run (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B11">Hayes et al., 1996</xref>). PF shows significant associations with all three dimensions of burnout in multiple samples (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B17">Losa et al., 2010</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B26">Noone &amp; Hastings, 2011</xref>). In these studies, increased PF is related to decreased emotional exhaustion, decreased depersonalization, and increased personal accomplishment, with the strongest relations found for emotional exhaustion. An ACT intervention reduced emotional exhaustion and depersonalization in a sample of government workers, and improvements in PA mediated decreases in emotional exhaustion but not depersonalization (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B16">Lloyd et al., 2013</xref>). Likewise, PF mediated burnout reduction in a mindfulness-based intervention for nurses (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B04">Duarte &amp; Pinto-Gouveia, 2017</xref>). This study did not break burnout into its components.</p>
        <p>Given their continuous contact with human suffering as part of their professional role, a contextual-behavioral approach to understanding and intervening on burnout may be particularly useful for mental health professionals. A simple functional model of burnout for mental health professionals would suggest that emotional exhaustion will be high and predicted from chronic contact with suffering, especially for those who are low in PF and prone to experiential avoidance (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B17">Losa et al., 2010</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B26">Noone &amp; Hastings, 2011</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B28">Ortiz-Fune, 2018</xref>). Consistent with available data suggesting that depersonalization is a defensive reaction to emotional exhaustion (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B01">Ashforth &amp; Lee, 1990</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B34">Sochos et al., 2012</xref>) and that depersonalization is often expressed as decreased reciprocity in interpersonal interactions (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B07">González-Morales et al., 2012</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B32">Rose et al., 2010</xref>), emotional exhaustion may lead to depersonalized clinical interactions to avoid contact with suffering (i.e., a disconnection from clients). Such depersonalization may be negatively reinforced in the short-term but lead to decreased personal accomplishment (i.e., less successful interactions with clients), and increased emotional exhaustion, producing a burnout cycle.</p>
        <p>While the potential roles of experiential avoidance and psychological flexibility in this process have been previously explored, we suggest that the interpersonal contextual model of awareness, courage, and love (ACL) from Functional Analytic Psychotherapy (FAP; Kuczynski et al., in press; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B20">Maitland et al., 2017</xref>) also may be helpful. According to this model, awareness refers to the need for emotional clarity and acceptance in interpersonal interactions, courage refers to being able to engage in authentic and vulnerable self-disclosures and to ask for what one needs in interactions, and love refers to being able to respond to others&rsquo; courageous self-disclosures and requests in ways that convey safety, express emotional validation, and sensitively provide what was requested. In FAP, ACL skills are taught to therapists to improve their relational interactions with clients, in the service of establishing authentic and healing interactions (e.g., <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B13">Kanter et al., 2013</xref>).</p>
        <p>In short, our aim is to understand burnout with an integrative contextual-behavioral model. In this model, we assume an overlap between PF and ACL interpersonal skills. Although PF has been defined differently by different authors (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B10">Hayes et al., 2009</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B18">Luciano, 2016</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B35">Strosahl et al., 2012</xref>), there seems to be agreement on two essential pillars: mindful awareness and acceptance of private experiences and the ability to engage in valued actions. The first pillar overlaps with the awareness concept from the ACL model. Likewise, courage and love skills may be seen as specifications of valued actions (vulnerable behaviors) that may be particularly important in the context of interpersonal interactions when one person is experiencing professional burnout.</p>
        <p>Specifically, we would expect emotional exhaustion to relate significantly with lower levels of awareness (and perhaps be more fully accounted for by psychological flexibility), but given the presumed interpersonal nature of depersonalization and its effects on personal accomplishment, we would expect depersonalization and lack of personal accomplishment to be more significantly and uniquely associated with lower levels of courage and love, as a diminished capacity for courage and love would be experienced as depersonalization and directly impact clinical interactions. Given the general lack of efficacy of burnout interventions with respect to these components of burnout in particular, establishing such relations is important in suggesting that FAP interventions targeting increased ACL (e.g., <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B12">Kanter et al., 2018</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B14">Kohlenberg et al., 2015</xref>), either alone or integrated with ACT interventions, may be helpful in addressing the complete syndrome of burnout in mental health professionals and others at risk. In fact, a combined ACT and FAP burnout intervention that did not incorporate ACL demonstrated improvements in emotional exhaustion but not depersonalization (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B19">Macías et al., 2019</xref>), while a single-subject investigation of a FAP burnout intervention that focused primarily on ACL with six mental health professionals documented large reductions in both emotional exhaustion and depersonalization for five of them (as well as large improvements in personal accomplishment; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B29">Reyes-Ortega et al., 2019</xref>).</p>
        <table-wrap id="t01">
            <label>Table 1</label>
            <caption>
                <title>Participants&rsquo; Demographic Characteristics</title>
            </caption>
            <graphic xlink:href="1130-5274-clinsa-31-2-0085-gt01.jpg"/>
        </table-wrap>
        <p>In the current study, we explored these processes in a cross-sectional survey of Spanish mental health professionals. We were interested in (1) replicating previous findings that psychological flexibility is associated with all facets of burnout and emotional exhaustion most strongly, and (2) identifying the unique predictive power of ACL in explaining dimensions of burnout above and beyond psychological flexibility. We hypothesized that courage and love in particular would significantly predict depersonalization and personal accomplishment over and above psychological flexibility. To our knowledge, this is the first exploration of how these contextual-behavioral processes collectively and uniquely predict burnout in mental health professionals. Furthermore, previous research has employed the general form of the widely used measure of flexibility, the Acceptance and Action Questionnaire (AAQ). We instead employed AAQ work-specific adaptation (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B03">Bond et al., 2013</xref>) which may offer a more precise understanding of these processes in context.</p> </sec>
        <sec sec-type="methods">
            <title>Method</title>
            <sec>
                <title>Participants</title>
                <p>Participants were 269 Spanish mental health professionals who completed an online survey. The majority of participants were female (81%), psychologists (84.8%), working 30 or more hours weekly (83.5%), and working in the Spanish Public Health System (53.9%). A detailed description of participants&rsquo; demographic characteristics is presented in <xref ref-type="table" rid="t01">Table 1</xref>.</p>
            </sec>
            <sec>
                <title>Measures</title>
                <p><bold>Burnout</bold>. The Spanish version (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B06">Gil-Monte, 2005</xref>) of the Maslach Human Services Survey Burnout Inventory (MBI; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B23">Maslach et al., 1996</xref>) is a 22-item self-report measure comprising three dimensions as discussed above: EE (9 items; e.g., &ldquo;I feel emotionally drained from my work&rdquo;), D (5 items; e.g., &ldquo;I treat some clients as if they were impersonal objects&rdquo;), and PA (8 items; e.g., &ldquo;I have accomplished many worthwhile things in this job&rdquo;). We used a 5-point scale from 1 (<italic>never</italic>) to 5 (<italic>everyday</italic>). A score for each subscale was computed by taking the sum across all relevant items such that higher scores reflected greater emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and feelings of personal accomplishment. In the current sample, the internal consistencies for each scale were: EE = .88, PA = .81, and D = .75.</p>
                <table-wrap id="t02">
                    <label>Table 2</label>
                    <caption>
                        <title>English Version of the Nine Items of the Social Interaction Scale (SIS) Used in the Current Study</title>
                    </caption>
                    <graphic xlink:href="1130-5274-clinsa-31-2-0085-gt02.jpg"/>
                </table-wrap>
                <p><bold>Work-related psychological flexibility.</bold> The Spanish version (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B33">Ruiz &amp; Odrionzola-González, 2014</xref>) of the Work-Related Acceptance and Action Questionnaire (WAAQ) measures psychological flexibility (engaging in goal-directed actions in the presence of unpleasant emotions) in a workplace context, with a total of 7 items (e.g., &ldquo;I can still work very effectively even if I am nervous about something&rdquo;). Each item is assessed on a 7-point scale from 1 (<italic>never true</italic>) to 7 (<italic>always true</italic>). The final score is obtained by the total sum of items with higher scores reflecting higher levels of workplace psychological flexibility. Internal consistency is .87.</p>
                <p><bold>Awareness, courage and love.</bold> The Spanish-language Social Interaction Scale, developed by <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B29">Reyes Ortega and Kanter (2017)</xref> as a quick assessment of awareness, courage, and love repertoires as described in FAP&rsquo;s model, was used. The scale includes 13 self-report items across four subscales; three of the subscales were included in the current analysis: Awareness (A; 3 items), Courage (C; 3 items), and Love (L; 3 items). A assessed the degree of self and others&rsquo; awareness in interactions, C assessed the ability to engage in emotional self-disclosure and ask for what one needs in relationships, and L assessed the ability to respond to others&rsquo; courage with safe, validating, and giving responses. We do not consider the 4<sup>th</sup> subscale (Accepting Love) to play a role in our burnout model. Mental health workers&rsquo; responsiveness represents better the role they play with clients than the skill of accepting love from others. Each item is responded to on a 7-point scale from 1 (<italic>totally false</italic>) to 7 (<italic>totally true</italic>). In the current sample, the internal consistencies for each scale were: A = .68, C = .64, and L = .74. English versions of the nine items used in the current study are presented in <xref ref-type="table" rid="t02">Table 2</xref>.</p>
            </sec>
            <sec>
                <title>Procedure</title>
                <p>The survey was created using the Google Form tool. Sampling was intentional, with a request to take the survey shared with different mental care associations such as the Spanish National Association of Clinical Psychologists and Residents (ANPIR). The survey first included an informed consent, followed by demographic questions and then the MBI, WAAQ, and SIS. The survey was anonymous. This procedure and the way to collect and save date are in compliment with the Spanish law of protection for personal information.</p>
            </sec>
            <sec>
                <title>Data Analysis</title>
                <p>To explore internal consistency of each measure in this sample, Cronbach&rsquo;s alpha test was used (see Measures).</p>
                <p>Two different procedures were used to explore the hypothesis. First, a multiple linear regression with the SIS subscales all entered in the same step to explore ACL contributions to burnout independently. Second, a hierarchical regression analysis including two blocks, with WAAQ scores entered at Block 1 and SIS subscales entered at Block 2, to explore the independent contributions of WAAQ (replicating previous research) and the unique contributions of ACL over and above WAAQ. For each procedure, three different analyses (one for each MBI subscale) were computed, checking the necessary assumptions.</p>
            </sec>
        </sec>
        <sec sec-type="results">
            <title>Results</title>
            <p>Means and standard deviations for each measure/subscale and simple correlations between measures are presented in <xref ref-type="table" rid="t03">Table 3</xref>. Means are moderated for the three burnout dimensions, with a higher dispersion found in D. Scores in WAAQ and SIS subscales are moderately high. The total score of the WAAQ and all ACL subscales correlated significantly with burnout&rsquo;s components as measured by the MBI.</p>
            <table-wrap id="t03">
                <label>Table 3</label>
                <caption>
                    <title>Correlations, Means, and Standard Deviations for All Study Variables</title>
                </caption>
                <graphic xlink:href="1130-5274-clinsa-31-2-0085-gt03.jpg"/>
                <table-wrap-foot>
                    <fn>
                        <p><italic>Note.</italic> EE = emotional exhaustion; D = depersonalization; PA = personal accomplishment; WAAQ = Work-related Acceptance and Action Questionnaire; A = awareness; C = courage; L = love; <italic>M</italic> = mean, <italic>SD</italic> = standard deviation.</p>
                    </fn>
                    <fn>
                        <p>*<italic>p</italic> &lt; .01, **<italic>p</italic> &lt; .00.</p>
                    </fn>
                </table-wrap-foot>
            </table-wrap>
            <p>The relations between WAAQ and SIS subscales with the three MBI dimensions appeared linear. There is no multicollinearity in our data (VIF scores are all below 10, and tolerance scores above 0.2), the values of the residuals are independent (Durbin-Watson values between 1.85 and 1.92) and normally distributed, and the homoscedasticity assumption was accepted for all regression models. Cook&rsquo;s distance values were all under 1, suggesting individual cases were not unduly influencing the model. Standardized &beta;, <italic>t</italic>, <italic>F</italic>, <italic>r,</italic> and <italic>R</italic> squared values, and the significance values for the overall models and specific variables, are presented in <xref ref-type="table" rid="t04">Table 4</xref> (regression analysis with the SIS) and <xref ref-type="table" rid="t05">Table 5</xref> (hierarchical regression analysis with the WAAQ and the SIS).</p>
            <p>
            <table-wrap id="t04">
                <label>Table 4</label>
                <caption>
                    <title>Outcomes for Regression Equations Predicting Burnout with SIS Subscales</title>
                </caption>
                <graphic xlink:href="1130-5274-clinsa-31-2-0085-gt04.jpg"/>
                <table-wrap-foot>
                    <fn>
                        <p><italic>Note.</italic> SIS = Social Interaction Scale.</p>
                    </fn>
                </table-wrap-foot>
            </table-wrap>
        </p>
        <p>
            <table-wrap id="t05">
                <label>Table 5</label>
                <caption>
                    <title>Outcomes for Hierarchical Regression Equations Predicting Burnout with WAAQ (Block 1) and SIS Subscales (Block 2)</title>
                </caption>
                <graphic xlink:href="1130-5274-clinsa-31-2-0085-gt05.jpg"/>
                <table-wrap-foot>
                    <fn>
                        <p><italic>Note.</italic> WAAQ = Work-related Acceptance and Action Questionnaire; SIS = Social Interaction Scale.</p>
                    </fn>
                </table-wrap-foot>
            </table-wrap>
        </p>
            <sec>
                <title>Emotional Exhaustion</title>
                <p>Regression analysis predicting EE from SIS produced a significant model, with 5.2% of the variance explained by the SIS. Only Love showed a significant (negative) relationship. The two hierarchical regression models were significant. For EE, the WAAQ accounted for 9.3% of variance, showing a negative and significant association. When SIS subscales were added, the amount of variance accounted for increased to 10.5%. No SIS subscales showed a significant association.</p>
            </sec>
            <sec>
                <title>Depersonalization</title>
                <p>The regression analysis predicting D from SIS subscales produced a significant model, with 8.1% of variance explained by SIS. Courage and Love showed negative and significant relationships with D. The two hierarchical regression models were significant. For D, WAAQ explained 5.8% of the variance, showing a negative and significant association. When SIS subscales were added, the model explained 9.9% of variance. Love showed a negative and significant association.</p>
            </sec>
            <sec>
                <title>Personal Accomplishment</title>
                <p>The regression analysis predicting PA from SIS produced a significant model, accounting for 18.8% of variance. All three subscales showed positive and significant relations. The two hierarchical regression models were significant. For PA, WAAQ accounted for 21.1% of variance, showing a positive and significant association. When SIS subscales were added, the model accounted for 28.7% of the variance. A, C, and L showed positive and significant associations.</p>
            </sec>
        </sec>
        <sec sec-type="discussion">
            <title>Discussion</title>
            <p>This paper sought to replicate, in a sample of Spanish mental health professionals, previous findings that psychological flexibility is associated with all three dimensions of burnout, and to explore the unique predictive power of a previously unexplored set of constructs&mdash;awareness, courage, and love&mdash;in explaining dimensions of burnout above and beyond psychological flexibility. We hypothesized that courage and love in particular would significantly predict depersonalization and personal accomplishment. Results demonstrated a strong relationship between psychological flexibility in the workplace and burnout&rsquo;s three dimensions. Love was the only ACL skill relevant to emotional exhaustion, but this effect disappeared when psychological flexibility was taken into account. Instead, as predicted, love was uniquely relevant for both depersonalization and personal accomplishment above and beyond psychological flexibility. Courage was relevant to depersonalization and personal accomplishment as well, with effects strongest for personal accomplishment. Awareness was only related with burnout&rsquo;s dimension of personal accomplishment, over and above the influence of psychological flexibility. In sum, it seems that being psychologically flexible (and fully aware) in workplace circumstances and having skills related with courageous and loving response classes are related with lower levels of emotional exhaustion (flexibility), depersonalization (flexibility and love), and higher feelings of personal accomplishment (flexibility, awareness, courage, and love).</p>
            <p>The obtained relations between psychological flexibility and burnout are consistent with the literature (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B16">Lloyd et al., 2013</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B17">Losa et al., 2010</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B26">Noone &amp; Hastings, 2011</xref>). Likewise, the results for interpersonal constructs of courage and love (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B15">Kuczynski et al., in press</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B20">Maitland et al., 2017</xref>) are consistent with literature on the importance of social relationships in workplaces. For example, variables such as support from colleagues (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B34">Sochos et al., 2012</xref>), relationships with colleagues, clients and the organization (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B32">Rose et al., 2010</xref>), and collective perception of burnout (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B07">González-Morales et al., 2012</xref>) are related with burnout and its dimensions.</p>
            <p>In general, results support the proposed functional model of burnout in mental health professionals. Briefly, this model suggests that an experiential avoidance response in the context of continuous contact with human suffering may backfire and increase emotional exhaustion. Such avoidance may also manifest as a depersonalization of interpersonal interactions in response to feeling emotionally exhausted and be maintained by short term consequences (negative reinforcement). The overall result of this pattern may be a decrease in experiences of personal accomplishment. However, results are modest, especially for emotional exhaustion and depersonalization. These two dimensions are moderated by many aspects, some of them out of workers&rsquo; control. Personal accomplishment, on the other hand, could be more related with workers&rsquo; behavior and its consequences.</p>
            <p>Courage and love findings add additional, potentially important considerations. Specifically, while WAAQ findings suggest that experiential avoidance in the context of high levels of contact with human suffering may backfire, producing more emotional exhaustion and depersonalization, the relation between love and depersonalization suggests that a diminished capacity to respond to others&rsquo; vulnerability&mdash;a primary task of therapists with their clients&mdash;may be an important element of this depersonalization response above and beyond experiential avoidance. Likewise, the relation between the three ACL dimensions and personal accomplishment suggests that skills like capacity for awareness of self and others, talking about one&rsquo;s vulnerable feelings and asking for what one needs, providing safety, validation and what others have asked may be particularly important for maintaining a sense of personal accomplishment when working in environments characterized by high levels of contact with human suffering. These findings are consistent with recent successful interventions for burnout that used FAP (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B19">Macías et al., 2019</xref>) and ACL (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B30">Reyes-Ortega et al., 2019</xref>) and suggest the potential of these techniques to be useful additions to burnout interventions.</p>
            <p>The significant predictions of personal accomplishment by both psychological flexibility and the ACL model are important findings. According to the literature, this dimension (and depersonalization) is harder to successfully intervene upon, with non-significant meta-analytic findings (see <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B21">Maricuoiu et al., 2016</xref>). In the current study, combination of psychological flexibility and ACL explained more variance in personal accomplishment than in other burnout dimensions, suggesting that such variables may be targeted to improve effectiveness of burnout interventions. Although the overall amount of variance explained may be interpreted as small, the obtained effects for the current study are consistent in size with if not larger than the effects obtained in other studies (e.g., <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B05">Dreison et al., 2018</xref>; <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B21">Maricuoiu et al., 2016</xref>). That said, it is important to consider that currently unknown moderator variables may be important to identify to improve the prediction and influence of burnout.</p>
            <p>Limitations of this study include measures used, the correlational nature of data, and characteristics of the sample. Regarding measures, multiple versions of the MBI have been employed making it difficult to relate results precisely with other studies. Likewise, we used AAQ&rsquo;s workplace-specific version, offering a more valid estimate of flexibility in this setting but making it harder to compare to results of studies using general AAQ. Finally, to our knowledge, this is the first empirical publication using SIS; as such it is not a previously validated measure. Our results offer initial support for the scale&rsquo;s internal consistency and predictive validity in this context.</p>
            <p>Although the obtained findings generally support our proposed model, the data are correlational in nature and proposed causal relations between variables have not been supported. For example, the foundational causal sequence of experiential avoidance, in the context of high contact with human suffering, producing emotional exhaustion, has not been supported. It may be the case that emotional exhaustion is produced by direct contact with suffering regardless of avoidance and makes such avoidance more likely. It is likely the case that such relations are bi-directional and reciprocal. That said, contextual-behavioral approaches aimed to offer pragmatically useful models, geared towards maximizing intervention success (<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="B09">Hayes et al., 2012</xref>), and targeting psychological flexibility are useful given the armamentarium of available techniques. The same may be said, to a lesser but still valid degree, for FAP&rsquo;s courage and love. Also, the overlap between concepts, such as PF and ACL subskills, could explain the poor additional contribution by the ACL model, over and beyond psychological flexibility. Analyzing different interventions (including or not ACL dimensions) could explain better their roles.</p>
            <p>Finally, the recruitment procedure and sampling produced a sample primarily of female Spanish psychologists. While this is an important sample in its own right, and we have no reason to suspect that obtained results are idiosyncratic to their unique characteristics, it is important to explore this model with additional international samples and a broader array of mental health professionals.</p>
        </sec>
    </body>
    <back>
        <fn-group>
            <fn fn-type="other" id="fn02">
                <p>Cite this article as: Ortiz-Fune, C., Kanter, J. W., &amp; Arias, M. F. (2020). Burnout in mental health professionals: The roles of psychological flexibility, awareness, courage, and love. <italic>Clínica y Salud, 31</italic>(2), 85-90. <ext-link ext-link-type="uri" xlink:href="https://doi.org/10.5093/clysa2020a8">https://doi.org/10.5093/clysa2020a8</ext-link></p>
            </fn>
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            </ref>
            <ref id="B35">

                <mixed-citation>Strosahl, K., Robinson, P., &amp; Gustavsson, T. (2012). <italic>Brief Intervention for radical change. Principles and practice of focused acceptance and commitment therapy</italic>. New Harbinger Publications.</mixed-citation>

                <element-citation publication-type="book">
                    <person-group person-group-type="author">
                        <name>
                            <surname>Strosahl</surname>
                            <given-names>K.</given-names>
                        </name>
                        <name>
                            <surname>Robinson</surname>
                            <given-names>P.</given-names>
                        </name>
                        <name>
                            <surname>Gustavsson</surname>
                            <given-names>T.</given-names>
                        </name>
                    </person-group>
                    <year>2012</year>
                    <source>Brief Intervention for radical change. Principles and practice of focused acceptance and commitment therapy</source>
                    <publisher-name>New Harbinger Publications</publisher-name>

                </element-citation>
            </ref>
        </ref-list>
    </back>
</article>
