| Literature DB >> 27618122 |
Abstract
This review examines the application of positive psychology concepts in physical health care contexts. Positive psychology aims to promote well-being in the general population. Studies identifying character strengths associated with well-being in healthy populations are numerous. Such strengths have been classified and Positive Psychology Interventions (PPIs) have been created to further develop these strengths in individuals. Positive psychology research is increasingly being undertaken in health care contexts. The review identified that most of this research involves measuring character strengths and their association with health outcomes in patients with a range of different conditions, similar to the position in positive psychology research on non-clinical populations. More recently, PPIs are beginning to be applied to clinical populations with physical health problems and this research, although relatively scarce, is reviewed here for cancer, coronary heart disease, and diabetes. In common with PPIs being evaluated in the general population, high quality studies are scarce. Applying PPIs to patients with serious health conditions presents significant challenges to health psychologists. They must ensure that patients are dealt with appropriately and ethically, given that exaggerated claims for PPIs are made on the internet quite frequently. This is discussed along with the need for more high quality research.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; cardiovascular disease; character strengths; diabetes; health assets; positive psychology interventions; review
Year: 2016 PMID: 27618122 PMCID: PMC5041067 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare4030066
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
Figure 1Study selection process [17].
Characteristics of included PPIs.
| References, First Author, Condition | Study Design | Constructs Targeted, Delivery Mode, Duration | Sample | Sampling method | Outcome Measures | Results | Quality Assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | RCT | Gratitude, (3 good things), letter writing, optimism, (best possible self), kindness. | Hospitalised cardiac patients | Self-selecting, randomized to intervention group | Pre-test and post-test scores for happiness *, positive affect *, mental health related quality of life *, anxiety *, depression *. | In PPI group depression, anxiety, happiness, Quality of life showed significantly more improvement from baseline after 8 weeks than in the other two groups. | Medium |
| [ | Single sample with follow up at 3- and 12- months | Hope, Impact of Events (stress) | Self-selecting responded to request from health care workers | Pre and post -test scores for hope, Impact of Events scale (stress) | Levels of hope increased Post-intervention and stress levels decreased but these decreases were not maintained at 3- and 12- month follow up. | Medium | |
| [ | Single-arm proof of concept study. Pretest -posttest design. | Optimism, gratitude, positive affect. First session (45 min) held in hospital or on phone, programme explained, and first exercise given. Subsequent exercise delivered weekly via a 15 min. telephone call to review previous exercise and set new one. Sessions delivered over 12 weeks and a written manual provided. | Self-selecting, recruited by researchers at hospital and outpatient diabetic clinics. Had to meet diagnostic criteria and adherence to treatment. | Optimism *, gratitude *, anxiety *, depression *, diabetes distress *, diabetes self-care activities *, health behavior adherence * | Only baseline data reported. Study ongoing. No follow up paper found or response from study team. | Incomplete | |
| [ | Pretest -post-test design with randomised control group from the self-selecting volunteer sample. | Positive affect, gratitude, acts of kindness, mindfulness, incorporated into a package. (Developing affective health to improve adherence to diabetes treatment) | Self-selecting, recruited online from a research volunteering site (n = 25) or from a diabetes education centre (n = 28) | Depression, perceived stress, positive & negative affect, diabetes self-efficacy, diabetes distress, diabetes-relevant health behaviours | Post- intervention reductions in depression, | Poor as an evaluation of a PPI as no direct measure of gratitude, positive affect, or mindfulness although study aims to develop these strengths. More a feasibility study. |
Note * indicates that psychometric scales were used to measure variables.
Application of Cochrane Criteria to PPIs.
| Cochrane Criteria | [ | [ | [ | [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1.Handbook or written guidance on PPI | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| 2. Randomisation adequate | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| 3. Comparability of groups | 1 | 0 no control group | 0 no control group | 0 no control group |
| 4. Longer term follow-up | 0 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| 5. Dropout rate given and acceptable | 1 | 0 | 1 from initial recruitment | 1 |
| 6. Assessed by objective outcomes | yes, but not all relevant for PPI | 1 | 1 in future | yes but not all relevant ones for PPI |
| 7. Intent-to treat analysis applied | 0 | 0 | intended | 0 |
| Total scores | 4 | 4 | Study continuing and only baseline data available. | 3 |