Mental health shame, self‐compassion and sleep in UK nursing students: Complete mediation of self‐compassion in sleep and mental health

Abstract Aims To explore relationships between mental health problems, mental health shame, self‐compassion and average length of sleep in UK nursing students. The increasing mental health problems in nursing students may be related to a strong sense of shame they experience for having a mental heal...

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Main Authors: Yasuhiro Kotera, Vicky Cockerill, James G. E. Chircop, Dawn Forman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-05-01
Series:Nursing Open
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.749
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spelling doaj-6c37df98e0e541538ead587205263e462021-04-14T15:51:10ZengWileyNursing Open2054-10582021-05-01831325133510.1002/nop2.749Mental health shame, self‐compassion and sleep in UK nursing students: Complete mediation of self‐compassion in sleep and mental healthYasuhiro Kotera0Vicky Cockerill1James G. E. Chircop2Dawn Forman3Centre for Human Sciences Research University of Derby Derby UKCollege of Health and Social Care University of Derby Derby UKOnline Learning University of Derby Derby UKCollege of Health and Social Care University of Derby Derby UKAbstract Aims To explore relationships between mental health problems, mental health shame, self‐compassion and average length of sleep in UK nursing students. The increasing mental health problems in nursing students may be related to a strong sense of shame they experience for having a mental health problem. Self‐compassion has been identified as a protective factor for mental health and shame in other student populations. Further, studies highlight the importance of sleep relating to mental health. Design A cross‐sectional design. Methods A convenient sampling of 182 nursing students at a university in the East Midlands completed a paper‐based questionnaire regarding these four constructs, from February to April 2019. Correlation, regression and mediation analyses were conducted. Results Mental health problems were positively related to shame and negatively related to self‐compassion and sleep. Mental health shame positively predicted and self‐compassion negatively predicted mental health problems: sleep was not a significant predictor of mental health problems. Lastly, self‐compassion completely mediated the impacts of sleep on mental health problems (negative relationship between mental health problems and sleep was fully explained by self‐compassion). Conclusion The importance of self‐compassion was highlighted as it can reduce mental health problems and shame. Self‐compassion can protect nursing students from mental distress when they are sleep deprived. Impact Nurses and nursing students are required to work irregular hours (e.g. COVID‐19) and mental distress can cause serious consequences in clinical practice. Our findings suggest that nurturing self‐compassion can protect their mental health and the negative impacts of sleep deprivation on mental health.https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.749mediation analysismental healthmental health shamenursing studentsself‐careself‐compassion
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yasuhiro Kotera
Vicky Cockerill
James G. E. Chircop
Dawn Forman
spellingShingle Yasuhiro Kotera
Vicky Cockerill
James G. E. Chircop
Dawn Forman
Mental health shame, self‐compassion and sleep in UK nursing students: Complete mediation of self‐compassion in sleep and mental health
Nursing Open
mediation analysis
mental health
mental health shame
nursing students
self‐care
self‐compassion
author_facet Yasuhiro Kotera
Vicky Cockerill
James G. E. Chircop
Dawn Forman
author_sort Yasuhiro Kotera
title Mental health shame, self‐compassion and sleep in UK nursing students: Complete mediation of self‐compassion in sleep and mental health
title_short Mental health shame, self‐compassion and sleep in UK nursing students: Complete mediation of self‐compassion in sleep and mental health
title_full Mental health shame, self‐compassion and sleep in UK nursing students: Complete mediation of self‐compassion in sleep and mental health
title_fullStr Mental health shame, self‐compassion and sleep in UK nursing students: Complete mediation of self‐compassion in sleep and mental health
title_full_unstemmed Mental health shame, self‐compassion and sleep in UK nursing students: Complete mediation of self‐compassion in sleep and mental health
title_sort mental health shame, self‐compassion and sleep in uk nursing students: complete mediation of self‐compassion in sleep and mental health
publisher Wiley
series Nursing Open
issn 2054-1058
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Abstract Aims To explore relationships between mental health problems, mental health shame, self‐compassion and average length of sleep in UK nursing students. The increasing mental health problems in nursing students may be related to a strong sense of shame they experience for having a mental health problem. Self‐compassion has been identified as a protective factor for mental health and shame in other student populations. Further, studies highlight the importance of sleep relating to mental health. Design A cross‐sectional design. Methods A convenient sampling of 182 nursing students at a university in the East Midlands completed a paper‐based questionnaire regarding these four constructs, from February to April 2019. Correlation, regression and mediation analyses were conducted. Results Mental health problems were positively related to shame and negatively related to self‐compassion and sleep. Mental health shame positively predicted and self‐compassion negatively predicted mental health problems: sleep was not a significant predictor of mental health problems. Lastly, self‐compassion completely mediated the impacts of sleep on mental health problems (negative relationship between mental health problems and sleep was fully explained by self‐compassion). Conclusion The importance of self‐compassion was highlighted as it can reduce mental health problems and shame. Self‐compassion can protect nursing students from mental distress when they are sleep deprived. Impact Nurses and nursing students are required to work irregular hours (e.g. COVID‐19) and mental distress can cause serious consequences in clinical practice. Our findings suggest that nurturing self‐compassion can protect their mental health and the negative impacts of sleep deprivation on mental health.
topic mediation analysis
mental health
mental health shame
nursing students
self‐care
self‐compassion
url https://doi.org/10.1002/nop2.749
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