In brief
A 2024 study of 682 Chinese nursing students found that maladaptive, but not adaptive, perfectionism was linked to feelings of relative deprivation, largely through heightened interpersonal sensitivity, with resilience moderating both pathways. The authors suggest interventions targeting perfectionistic thinking,...
What this article is about
Quick Answer
A 2024 study of 682 Chinese nursing students found that maladaptive, but not adaptive, perfectionism was linked to feelings of relative deprivation, largely through heightened interpersonal sensitivity, with resilience moderating both pathways. The authors suggest interventions targeting perfectionistic thinking, sensitivity to feedback, and resilience-building could help reduce these feelings.
Student takeaways
Key Takeaways
- Adaptive perfectionism was not significantly correlated with relative deprivation among the 682 nursing students surveyed.
- Maladaptive perfectionism was significantly positively correlated with interpersonal sensitivity, relative deprivation, and resilience.
- Interpersonal sensitivity mediated the relationship between maladaptive perfectionism and relative deprivation, accounting for 41.07% of the total effect.
- Resilience moderated the first-half path of the mediation model, the link between maladaptive perfectionism and interpersonal sensitivity.
- Resilience also moderated the direct path between maladaptive perfectionism and relative deprivation.
Student summary
Why This Research Matters
Nursing school can feel like a pressure cooker of grades, clinical evaluations, and constant comparison with classmates. A 2024 study published in Psychology in the Schools examined why some nursing students feel more short-changed than others, a feeling researchers call "relative deprivation": the sense that you are getting less than you deserve compared with the people around you. The researchers, led by Yueming Ding and colleagues, wanted to know whether perfectionism plays a role in that feeling, and if so, how.
The study surveyed 682 nursing students from two universities in Henan Province, China. Using a cross-sectional design, students completed questionnaires measuring their demographic background, perfectionism, relative deprivation, interpersonal sensitivity (how strongly a person notices and reacts to others' opinions, criticism, and social cues), and resilience (the capacity to adapt and recover from stress). The researchers used Pearson's correlation analysis and the PROCESS macro, a regression-based technique for testing mediation and moderation, to map out how these variables related to one another.
One of the most useful things about the study is that it distinguishes between two forms of perfectionism. Adaptive perfectionism describes high personal standards paired with a healthy tolerance for imperfection: striving for excellence without falling apart when things go wrong. Maladaptive perfectionism, in contrast, is rigid and self-critical, an all-or-nothing mindset in which anything short of flawless feels like failure. This distinction mattered a great deal for the results.
The researchers found that adaptive perfectionism was not significantly associated with relative deprivation. In other words, students who simply held themselves to high standards did not necessarily feel shortchanged relative to their peers. Maladaptive perfectionism told a different story. It was significantly and positively correlated with interpersonal sensitivity, relative deprivation, and, somewhat counterintuitively, resilience — a correlation the study reported but did not fully explain, so it should be read cautiously rather than as evidence that self-critical perfectionism somehow "builds" resilience.
Digging deeper, the study found that interpersonal sensitivity acted as a mediator between maladaptive perfectionism and relative deprivation, meaning that maladaptive perfectionism appears to increase relative deprivation partly because it first heightens a student's sensitivity to how others see them, and that heightened sensitivity then feeds feelings of being unfairly treated or left behind. This mediation pathway accounted for about 41% of the total effect linking maladaptive perfectionism to relative deprivation, a substantial share.
The researchers also tested whether resilience changed the strength of these relationships, a technique called moderation. They found that resilience moderated both the first half of the mediation pathway (the link between maladaptive perfectionism and interpersonal sensitivity) and the direct path (the link between maladaptive perfectionism and relative deprivation). This suggests that a student's capacity to bounce back from setbacks can either buffer or amplify how strongly perfectionistic tendencies translate into interpersonal sensitivity and feelings of deprivation, depending on where a student falls on that resilience continuum.
Putting it together, the authors argue that maladaptive perfectionism, interpersonal sensitivity, and low resilience form an interlocking cluster that can leave nursing students feeling shortchanged relative to their classmates, a feeling that other research has linked to stress, burnout, and lower well-being. Because relative deprivation is about perception and comparison rather than objective circumstances, the study suggests that targeted interventions aimed at reducing maladaptive perfectionistic thinking, easing excessive interpersonal sensitivity, and building resilience could help reduce these feelings among nursing students.
For students, the takeaway is not that striving for excellence is harmful; adaptive perfectionism was not linked to relative deprivation at all. The concern is the rigid, self-critical version of perfectionism, especially when paired with high sensitivity to others' judgments and lower resilience. Recognizing your own patterns around comparison, criticism sensitivity, and recovery from setbacks may be a useful first step, and programs that build resilience skills, such as stress management, cognitive reframing, and peer support, may be worth seeking out if these patterns feel familiar.
It is worth remembering that this is a single cross-sectional study conducted with nursing students in China using self-report questionnaires, so the findings describe associations rather than proven cause-and-effect, and may not generalize directly to nursing programs in other countries, including Canada.
Source abstract
Study Overview
This study investigated the relationship between perfectionism and relative deprivation among nursing students in China as well as the mediating role of interpersonal sensitivity and the moderating role of resilience in this relationship. A cross-sectional study design involved 682 nursing students participants from two universities in Henan Province, China, using questionnaires about demographics, perfectionism, relative deprivation, interpersonal sensitivity, and resilience. Descriptive statistics, Pearson's correlation analysis and the PROCESS macro in regression analysis were used for data analysis. Adaptive perfectionism was not significantly correlated with relative deprivation, while maladaptive perfectionism was significantly positively correlated with interpersonal sensitivity, relative deprivation, and resilience. Interpersonal sensitivity mediated the relationship between maladaptive perfectionism and relative deprivation, accounting for 41.07% of the total effect. Moreover, the first half path and direct path of this process were moderated by resilience. These results show that targeted interventions to reduce maladaptive perfectionism, reduce interpersonal sensitivity and improve resilience of nursing students could help reduce their relative deprivation.
Evidence appraisal
Main Findings
- Adaptive perfectionism was not significantly correlated with relative deprivation among the 682 nursing students surveyed.
- Maladaptive perfectionism was significantly positively correlated with interpersonal sensitivity, relative deprivation, and resilience.
- Interpersonal sensitivity mediated the relationship between maladaptive perfectionism and relative deprivation, accounting for 41.07% of the total effect.
- Resilience moderated the first-half path of the mediation model, the link between maladaptive perfectionism and interpersonal sensitivity.
- Resilience also moderated the direct path between maladaptive perfectionism and relative deprivation.
Practice transfer
Clinical Relevance
- Nurse educators and student support staff may want to distinguish maladaptive from adaptive perfectionistic patterns when addressing student distress, since only the maladaptive form was linked to relative deprivation in this sample.
- Because interpersonal sensitivity carried a substantial share of the effect, interventions that help students respond to feedback and social comparison less reactively, such as feedback literacy or self-compassion training, may help reduce feelings of being treated unfairly.
- Resilience-building activities, such as stress-management skills, peer mentoring, and reflective practice, could be incorporated into nursing curricula as a buffer against the psychological effects of perfectionistic tendencies, based on this study's moderation findings.
- Cognitive-behavioral approaches that challenge all-or-nothing, self-critical thinking patterns may be a reasonable starting point for students showing signs of maladaptive perfectionism, though this study did not test any intervention directly.
- Faculty advising and mentoring programs might benefit from routinely assessing students' sense of relative deprivation as an early indicator of psychological strain, given its documented links in the broader literature to burnout and disengagement.
Faculty notes
Educational Relevance
This cross-sectional study (Ding et al., 2024, Psychology in the Schools) examined the relationships among perfectionism, relative deprivation, interpersonal sensitivity, and resilience in a sample of 682 nursing students from two universities in Henan Province, China. The design allows instructors to introduce students to moderated mediation analysis, a statistical approach increasingly common in nursing education and psychology research, using a topic (academic pressure and social comparison) that resonates directly with student experience.
Methodologically, the study relied on self-report questionnaires for perfectionism, relative deprivation, interpersonal sensitivity, and resilience, analyzed via Pearson's correlation and Hayes' PROCESS macro. This macro is widely used in nursing and health-professions education research to test whether a third variable explains (mediates) or changes the strength of (moderates) a relationship between two other variables. Faculty using this article for a research-methods seminar could walk students through the logic of a moderated mediation model: interpersonal sensitivity as the mediator between maladaptive perfectionism and relative deprivation, and resilience as the moderator of both the first-stage path and the direct path.
The substantive findings are clinically and pedagogically relevant. Adaptive perfectionism, high standards paired with tolerance for imperfection, was not significantly correlated with relative deprivation, whereas maladaptive perfectionism, rigid, self-critical, all-or-nothing standards, was positively correlated with interpersonal sensitivity, relative deprivation, and resilience. Interpersonal sensitivity mediated 41.07% of the total effect between maladaptive perfectionism and relative deprivation, indicating a substantial indirect pathway. Resilience moderated both the maladaptive-perfectionism-to-interpersonal-sensitivity path and the maladaptive-perfectionism-to-relative-deprivation direct path, suggesting it functions as a buffering or amplifying factor depending on students' resilience level.
For nurse educators, this study offers a useful frame for discussing the psychological pressures nursing programs can place on students, including competitive grading, high-stakes clinical evaluation, and comparison with peers, and how individual differences in perfectionistic style, sensitivity to social feedback, and resilience shape students' subjective sense of being treated unfairly relative to classmates. This has implications for student support services, mentoring, and curriculum design: interventions that target maladaptive perfectionistic cognitions (for example, cognitive-behavioral approaches challenging all-or-nothing thinking), reduce excessive interpersonal sensitivity (feedback literacy, self-compassion training), and build resilience (stress-inoculation training, peer mentoring, reflective practice) may reduce relative deprivation and downstream correlates such as burnout and disengagement.
Discussion in class should emphasize appraisal limits: this is a single cross-sectional study using self-report instruments in a Chinese undergraduate nursing sample, which restricts causal inference and generalizability to other cultural or curricular contexts, including Canadian nursing programs. The metadata available for this article did not include effect sizes beyond the reported mediation proportion, confidence intervals, or the full names and psychometrics of the instruments used, so instructors should direct students who want to appraise the study rigorously to retrieve the full text (Psychology in the Schools, Vol. 61, Issue 4, pp. 1360-1374; DOI 10.1002/pits.23116) via their institutional library rather than relying on the abstract alone. This article pairs well with related work on perfectionism and interpersonal sensitivity in nursing students for a broader unit on student mental health and resilience-building curricula.
Critical appraisal
Limitations
- The cross-sectional design means causal claims about perfectionism leading to relative deprivation cannot be confirmed; the relationships identified are associations at a single point in time.
- The sample was limited to 682 nursing students from two universities in Henan Province, China, which may limit generalizability to nursing students in other regions or countries, including Canada.
- All variables were measured using self-report questionnaires, which are subject to social desirability bias and shared-method variance that can inflate observed correlations.
Classroom use
Discussion Questions
- How would you distinguish adaptive from maladaptive perfectionism in a fellow nursing student, and why did only the maladaptive form predict relative deprivation in this study?
- What does it mean for interpersonal sensitivity to mediate 41.07% of the relationship between maladaptive perfectionism and relative deprivation, and how would you explain this to a classmate unfamiliar with statistics?
- Why might resilience moderate the effect of maladaptive perfectionism on interpersonal sensitivity in some students but not act the same way in others?
- In your own nursing program, what academic or clinical situations tend to trigger the strongest sense of relative deprivation compared with your peers?
- What are the risks of assuming that all perfectionism among nursing students is harmful, given this study's finding that adaptive perfectionism was not linked to relative deprivation?
- How might a nurse educator design a curriculum activity that helps students recognize maladaptive perfectionistic thinking without discouraging high standards altogether?
- What resilience-building strategies have you personally used, and how might they map onto the moderating role of resilience found in this study?
- Given that this was a cross-sectional study in China, what cultural or institutional factors might make these findings more or less applicable to nursing programs in Canada?
- What additional data, such as academic performance, burnout measures, or longitudinal follow-up, would strengthen confidence that maladaptive perfectionism causes increased relative deprivation rather than merely correlating with it?
- How could student support services use the concept of relative deprivation to identify students who may be at risk for stress-related difficulties, even before overt symptoms of burnout appear?
Knowledge check
Quiz
1. What was the sample size and setting of this study?
- 682 nursing students from two universities in Henan Province, China
- 250 nursing students from a single Canadian university
- 1,000 nursing students across five provinces in China
- 682 nursing faculty members from Henan Province, China
Rationale: The abstract states the study 'involved 682 nursing students participants from two universities in Henan Province, China.'
2. Which research design did the researchers use?
- Cross-sectional study design
- Randomized controlled trial
- Longitudinal cohort study
- Qualitative case study
Rationale: The abstract states: 'A cross-sectional study design involved 682 nursing students participants.'
3. What analysis technique did the researchers use to test mediation and moderation?
- The PROCESS macro in regression analysis
- Structural equation modeling with AMOS
- Chi-square test of independence
- Thematic analysis
Rationale: The abstract states: 'Descriptive statistics, Pearson's correlation analysis and the PROCESS macro in regression analysis were used for data analysis.'
4. How was adaptive perfectionism related to relative deprivation in this study?
- It was not significantly correlated with relative deprivation
- It was strongly negatively correlated with relative deprivation
- It was the strongest predictor of relative deprivation
- It fully mediated the effect of resilience on relative deprivation
Rationale: The abstract states: 'Adaptive perfectionism was not significantly correlated with relative deprivation.'
5. Which variable mediated the relationship between maladaptive perfectionism and relative deprivation?
- Interpersonal sensitivity
- Resilience
- Academic performance
- Demographic background
Rationale: The abstract states: 'Interpersonal sensitivity mediated the relationship between maladaptive perfectionism and relative deprivation, accounting for 41.07% of the total effect.'
6. Approximately what percentage of the total effect between maladaptive perfectionism and relative deprivation was accounted for by the mediating pathway?
- 41.07%
- 10.5%
- 75%
- 5%
Rationale: The abstract states the mediation accounted for '41.07% of the total effect.'
7. Which paths in the model were moderated by resilience?
- The first half path and the direct path
- Only the second half path
- None of the paths were moderated
- Only the total effect, not any individual path
Rationale: The abstract states: 'the first half path and direct path of this process were moderated by resilience.'
8. According to the authors, what kind of interventions could help reduce relative deprivation among nursing students?
- Targeted interventions to reduce maladaptive perfectionism, reduce interpersonal sensitivity, and improve resilience
- Only interventions that eliminate all forms of perfectionism
- Interventions focused exclusively on academic tutoring
- No interventions were suggested by the authors
Rationale: The abstract states: 'targeted interventions to reduce maladaptive perfectionism, reduce interpersonal sensitivity and improve resilience of nursing students could help reduce their relative deprivation.'
9. In which journal was this study published?
- Psychology in the Schools
- Journal of Nursing Education
- Nurse Education Today
- Journal of Advanced Nursing
Rationale: Supplementary research (the ERIC record and the corresponding Wiley Online Library listing) confirms the study appeared in Psychology in the Schools, Volume 61, Issue 4.
10. What is a key limitation of this study's design when interpreting its findings?
- Its cross-sectional design means causal relationships cannot be confirmed
- It used a randomized controlled trial that eliminates all bias
- It included a 10-year follow-up of participants
- It measured behaviors through direct clinical observation rather than questionnaires
Rationale: The abstract describes 'a cross-sectional study design,' which by nature captures data at one point in time and cannot establish causality.
Study cards
Flashcards
What is relative deprivation?
The subjective feeling of having less than what you deserve compared with the people around you.
What is the difference between adaptive and maladaptive perfectionism?
Adaptive perfectionism involves high standards paired with tolerance for imperfection; maladaptive perfectionism is rigid, self-critical, all-or-nothing thinking.
How many nursing students participated in this study?
682 nursing students from two universities in Henan Province, China.
What study design was used?
A cross-sectional study design.
What statistical tools were used to analyze the data?
Descriptive statistics, Pearson's correlation analysis, and the PROCESS macro in regression analysis.
Was adaptive perfectionism significantly correlated with relative deprivation?
No, adaptive perfectionism was not significantly correlated with relative deprivation.
What was maladaptive perfectionism significantly correlated with?
Interpersonal sensitivity, relative deprivation, and resilience.
What is interpersonal sensitivity in this context?
A heightened tendency to notice and react to others' opinions, judgments, and social cues.
What role did interpersonal sensitivity play in the model?
It mediated the relationship between maladaptive perfectionism and relative deprivation.
What percentage of the total effect did the mediation pathway account for?
41.07% of the total effect.
What is resilience as used in this study?
The capacity to adapt to and recover from stress or adversity.
What role did resilience play in the model?
It moderated both the first-half path (maladaptive perfectionism to interpersonal sensitivity) and the direct path (maladaptive perfectionism to relative deprivation).
What is moderated mediation?
A statistical model in which a mediating variable explains part of a relationship and a moderating variable changes the strength of that relationship at one or more points.
What does the PROCESS macro do?
It is a regression-based tool commonly used to test mediation and moderation models.
What did the authors recommend based on their findings?
Targeted interventions to reduce maladaptive perfectionism, reduce interpersonal sensitivity, and improve resilience among nursing students.
Where was this study conducted?
Two universities in Henan Province, China.
In which journal and year was this study published?
Psychology in the Schools, 2024 (Volume 61, Issue 4).
What is a key limitation of self-report questionnaire studies like this one?
They are subject to social desirability bias and shared-method variance, which can inflate observed correlations.
Why can't this study prove that maladaptive perfectionism causes relative deprivation?
Because it used a cross-sectional design, which captures data at a single point in time and cannot establish cause-and-effect.
Why might this study be relevant to nurse educators outside China?
It highlights how perfectionism, sensitivity to social feedback, and resilience can shape students' well-being, informing student-support and curriculum design even though direct generalizability requires caution.
Search-ready answers
Frequently asked questions
What is relative deprivation in nursing students?
It refers to feeling that you have less than you deserve compared with your peers, for example feeling academically or socially shortchanged relative to classmates.
Does perfectionism cause relative deprivation in nursing students?
This study found an association, not proof of causation: maladaptive perfectionism was linked to higher relative deprivation, while adaptive perfectionism was not significantly linked at all.
What is the difference between good and bad perfectionism?
Researchers often distinguish adaptive perfectionism (high standards with tolerance for imperfection) from maladaptive perfectionism (rigid, self-critical, all-or-nothing standards); only the maladaptive form was tied to relative deprivation in this study.
How does interpersonal sensitivity relate to perfectionism and deprivation?
The study found interpersonal sensitivity mediated the link between maladaptive perfectionism and relative deprivation, accounting for about 41% of the total effect.
Can resilience protect nursing students from these effects?
Resilience moderated both the path from maladaptive perfectionism to interpersonal sensitivity and the direct path to relative deprivation, suggesting it plays a buffering or amplifying role depending on a student's resilience level.
How many students were studied and where?
682 nursing students from two universities in Henan Province, China, participated in this cross-sectional survey study.
What statistical methods did the researchers use?
They used descriptive statistics, Pearson's correlation analysis, and the PROCESS macro, a regression-based mediation and moderation analysis tool.
What practical interventions do the authors suggest?
Targeted interventions aimed at reducing maladaptive perfectionism, lowering interpersonal sensitivity, and building resilience, which the authors suggest could help reduce relative deprivation among nursing students.
Can these findings be applied to nursing students outside China?
Caution is warranted; the study sampled only Chinese nursing students at two universities using self-report questionnaires, so generalizability to other countries or cultural contexts is not established.
Where was this study published?
In Psychology in the Schools (2024, Volume 61, Issue 4), authored by Ding, Lu, Chen, and colleagues.