ABSTRACT

The psychological health of competitive athletes is of paramount importance to performance, retention, and well-being in sport, and national governing bodies are increasingly concerned with its promotion. Psychosocial Health and Well-being in High-Level Athletes offers students, researchers, and practicing sport psychologists an accessible and rigorous grounding in the manifestations of psychosocial health in athletes, the threats athletes face to their psychosocial health, and the interventions which can be designed to enhance it.

Seeking to guide future research and expand professional understanding of psychosocial issues in sport, the book is based on a model of cognitive, emotional, social, and spiritual health. It clearly defines these dimensions in a sporting context before discussing pertinent threats—such as career transitions, injuries and abuse—and interventions, including adversarial growth, life-skill interventions, prevention and organization policy, and mindfulness-based interventions.

Providing an innovative and integrated perspective on psychosocial health and well-being in competitive sport, this book is essential reading for upper-level students taking any clincial sport psychology modules, and for sport psychologists, coaches, and administrators working with competitive athletes.

part I|2 pages

Foundations of psychosocial health

chapter 2|18 pages

Cognitive and emotional health

chapter 3|13 pages

Social and spiritual health

part II|1 pages

Threats to psychosocial health

chapter 4|12 pages

Organizational stress

chapter 5|13 pages

Performance pressure

chapter 6|13 pages

Abuse

chapter 7|16 pages

Injury

chapter 8|12 pages

Transitions

part III|1 pages

Interventions and positive outcomes

chapter 9|14 pages

Prevention

chapter 10|9 pages

Organizational practices and policy

chapter 11|11 pages

Treatment

chapter 12|14 pages

Resilience and Adversarial Growth