“…Resilience is generally conceptualized as maintained mental health or positive adaptation despite trauma exposure (Choi, Stein, Dunn, Koenen, & Smoller, 2019;Kalisch et al, 2017;Luthar, Cicchetti, & Becker, 2000). The two most widely used approaches to operationalize the concept define resilience as perceived coping ability reflecting a stable tendency to cope effectively with stress and adversity (Campbell-Sills & Stein, 2007;Connor & Davidson, 2003), and as psychiatric resilience reflecting an empirically derived outcome, such as the absence of PTSD or other psychiatric disorders among individuals exposed to adversity (Nishimi, Choi, Cerutti, et al, 2020;Sheerin, Stratton, Amstadter, The VA Mid-Atlantic Mental Illness Research, Education, Clinical Center (MIRECC) Workgroup., & McDonald, 2018). The different resilience definitions are not mutually exclusive, but rather complementary and may capture different underlying dimensions of resilience (Choi et al, 2019;Fisher & Law, 2021;Sheerin et al, 2018) .…”