Author:
Kubzansky Laura D.,Kim Eric S.,Boehm Julia K.,Davidson Richard J.,Huffman Jeffrey C.,Loucks Eric B.,Lyubomirsky Sonja,Picard Rosalind W.,Schueller Stephen M.,Trudel-Fitzgerald Claudia,VanderWeele Tyler J.,Warran Katey,Yeager David S.,Yeh Charlotte S.,Moskowitz Judith T.
Abstract
Abstract
Psychological well-being, characterized by feelings, cognitions, and strategies that are associated with positive functioning (including hedonic and eudaimonic well-being), has been linked with better physical health and greater longevity. Importantly, psychological well-being can be strengthened with interventions, providing a strategy for improving population health. But are the effects of well-being interventions meaningful, durable, and scalable enough to improve health at a population-level? To assess this possibility, a cross-disciplinary group of scholars convened to review current knowledge and develop a research agenda. Here we summarize and build on the key insights from this convening, which were: (1) existing interventions should continue to be adapted to achieve a large-enough effect to result in downstream improvements in psychological functioning and health, (2) research should determine the durability of interventions needed to drive population-level and lasting changes, (3) a shift from individual-level care and treatment to a public-health model of population-level prevention is needed and will require new infrastructure that can deliver interventions at scale, (4) interventions should be accessible and effective in racially, ethnically, and geographically diverse samples. A discussion examining the key future research questions follows.
Funder
National Institute of Mental Health
Canadian Institutes of Health Research
Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science
Cited by
17 articles.
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