학술논문

Current recommendations on the selection of measures for well-being
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Epidemiology
Public Health
Health Sciences
Well-being
Flourishing
Measurement
Happiness
Surveys
Life satisfaction
Purpose in life
Optimism
Psychology
Public health
Human Movement and Sports Sciences
Public Health and Health Services
Language
Abstract
Measures of well-being have proliferated over the past decades. Very little guidance has been available as to which measures to use in what contexts. This paper provides a series of recommendations, based on the present state of knowledge and the existing measures available, of what measures might be preferred in which contexts. The recommendations came out of an interdisciplinary workshop on the measurement of well-being. The recommendations are shaped around the number of items that can be included in a survey, and also based on the differing potential contexts and purposes of data collection such as, for example, government surveys, or multi-use cohort studies, or studies specifically about psychological well-being. The recommendations are not intended to be definitive, but to stimulate discussion and refinement, and to provide guidance to those relatively new to the study of well-being.