| Literature DB >> 31507332 |
Chiara Ruini1, Giulia Cesetti1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIM: Recent investigations pointed out to the important role of well-being in influencing physical and mental health, with robust findings for the dimension of depression. The aim of this systematic review is to provide an updated summary of articles focused on eudaimonia and depression, including psychosocial interventions that addressed both issues.Entities:
Keywords: adulthood; depression; eudaimonia; mental health; recovery; well-being
Year: 2019 PMID: 31507332 PMCID: PMC6720155 DOI: 10.2147/PRBM.S178255
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Res Behav Manag ISSN: 1179-1578
Figure 1Review flowchart.
Review template of eudaimonia and depression
| Eudaimonia and depression | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author (s) (year) and country | Measurement | Population and sample size (mean age or age range) | Study design | Main objective (s) | Main results | Effect size (s) |
| Avsec et al (2016) | Orientations to Happiness (OTH) Questionnaire (18 items); | 3690 participants aged 18–50 years recruited in seven countries | Cluster analyses, comparative analyses among clusters | To investigate how specific orientations to happiness combine within individuals in each of the seven samples, and how the clusters differed in terms of well-being and ill-being | Four clusters representing OTH emerged (Full, Empty, Pleasurable, and Meaningful life types) in all seven countries. In all seven countries, OTH types differed significantly regarding all measures, except for depressive symptoms in Mexican and Czech samples. Individuals classified into the Full life type reported the highest psychological well-being, the highest life satisfaction and the lowest depressive symptoms. Conversely, individuals in the Empty life reported the highest depressive symptoms and the lowest well-being. | Effec sizes ranging from ƞ2 0.16–0.22 for psychological well-being dimensions; |
| Bartrés-Faz et al (2018) | Orientation to Life Questionnaire (OLQ-13) 0.13 itmes | 1081 participants (mean age=52.0 years; 680 women) age range 40–65 years | Desciptive study, regressive analyses | To evaluate the association between sociodemographic variables, eudaimonic dimensions, and cognitive reserve with cognitive functioning and affective status. | Individuals with higher scores in eudaimonia reported better cognitive function and lower levels of negative affectivity. Age, gender, DASS score, cognitive reserve and eudaimonic well-being contributed to predict cognitive function. Better cognitive status was associated with a lower age, the male gender, and higher eudaimonic well-being. Conversely, negative affectivity, including depression, anxiety, and stress, only showed an association with eudaimonia, but not with cognitive reserve or cognitive functioning. | Small effect size for the association between purpose in life and age (η=0.07) and eudaimonia and gender (η2<0.01) |
| Baselmans et al (2018) | “Anxious/Depressed” subscale of the age-appropriate survey of the Achenbach’s System of Empiricalbased Assessment Cantril Ladder 10 steps :10 indicates the best possible life, and 1 indicates the worst possible life. | 43.427 twins between age 7 and 99 years | Twin-design, longitudinal | To gain insight into the etiology of the association between well-being and depressive symptoms across the lifespan, considering their genetic underpinnings | In childhood, genetic and environmental effects are about equally important in explaining the relationship between well-being and depressive symptoms. From adolescence onwards, the role of genetic effects increases compared to environmental effects. | Depressive symptoms were significantly higher in females, with large effect size observed at age 16 (Cohen’s d=−0.62). At age 14 females reported also lower levels of well-being (Cohen’s d=0.19). Small effect size (Cohen’s d=0.3) for differences between monozigotes vs dizigotes twins |
| Bassi et al (2017) | Ryff PWB, 42 items | 81 pregnant women (mean age=33.9 years) | Longitudinal design | To explore the impact of parity and childbirth on both women’s perinatal depression and psychological well-being. | Significant negative correlations observed between depression and psychological well-being dimensions. Depression did not differ between primiparous and multiparous women, or between pre- and postpartum assessments. By contrast, after childbirth, primiparous women reported higher values of environmental mastery and self-acceptance than multiparous women. Levels of self-acceptance and personal growth increased from pregnancy to postpartum among primiparous women, while no differences were detected over time in the scores of all the psychological well-being dimensions among multiparous women. | Higher eudaimonia in promiparous comapred to multiparous women: ƞ=0.06 |
| Bhullar et al (2014) | Ryff PWB − 84 items | 207 Australian university students (Mean age=30.16 years) | Cross-sectional, comparative design | To identify profiles of PWB in a sample of Australian university students and to verify if these profile membership would predict depression. | Profiles 1 (2% of the sample) and 2 (10% of the sample) consisted of individuals who scored very low (Profile 1) or low (Profile 2) on all of six PWB scales. Profile 3 (25% of the sample) scores fell below the mean on five of the six PWB markers, but Autonomy. Individuals comprising Profiles 4 (33% of the sample) and 5 (30% of the sample) exhibited high (Profile 4) and very high (Profile 5) on all six indicators of PWB. There were significant differences between Profiles 1 and 2 and Profiles 4 and 5, with the latter groups reporting lower levels of depression. | Differeces among profiles ranging from η2=0.46 to 0.85 for eudiamonic well-being; η2=0.48 for differences in depression |
| Bohlmeijer et al (2015) | Mental Health Continnum (MHC), 14 items, | 376 adults (mean age=42 years) with mild to moderate depressive symptoms | Randomized controlled trial with follow-up | To evaluate the impacts of a guided self-help intervention based on Acceptance and Committment Therapy (ACT) vs waiting list on flourishing | ACT had a positive effect on flourishing. Baseline levels of positive mental health and decrease in depressive sympotoms during treatment predicted flourishing at follow-up. | Not available |
| Brandel et al (2018) | Ryff’s Psychological Well-being Scales 42 items | 50 pregnant couples (n=50 fathers-to-be; n=50 mothers-to-be; age range 24–53 years | Comparative and longitudinal design | To examine eudaimonic well-being during the transition to parenthood, considering depressive symptoms and gender differences. | Having a child increased well-being in both parents, but improvements were more robust for fathers. Gender differences accounted for 4.6% of the variance in postnatal eudaimonic well-being, while prenatal levels of eudaimonic well-being accounted for 70%. | Predictors of postmnatal eudiamonia: gender: η2=0.46 baseline PWB: η2.700, gender×change in depression η2.009 change in depression: η2.002 |
| Brooks et al (2017) | Elevation Experience Scale 9 items | 121 undergraduate students (mean age=21.54 years) | Cross-sectional, 3 experimental studies | To show the beneficial effect of nature contact on mood and human well-being. | Across three different experiments, it was found that both actual and pictorial nature contact benefitted moods, even though actual nature was more effective. Nature contact of both types decreased depression and increased eudaimonic well-being. The authors suggest to use pictured nature as an emotion management technique suitable as a clinical treatment for mood disorders. | Pre-post effect of setting (actual vs picture contact with nature) η2=0.116 |
| Brown et al (2015) | Satisfaction with Life Scale (SWLS), | 206 women aged 40–60, (Mean age =53.64 years) | Cross-sectional study | To test two hypothesized models of well-being of midlife women, considering well-beng, depression and self-compassion | Psychological aspects of the menopause appear more strongly linked to well-being than physiological aspects such as menopausal stage and hot flush frequency. Self-compassion and beliefs about control of menopause are associated with well-being. No evidence found of a link between menopausal stage and depressive symptoms. | Not available |
| Browne et al (2017) | Scales of Psychological Well-being – 18 items. | 404 participants (mean age =23 years) who had experienced a single episode of non-affective psychosis assigned to active treatment or community care | Randomized controlled trial | (1) To examine the impact of treatment on PWB and mental health recovery, (2) to examine the impact of duration of untreated psychosis (DUP) on these outcomes, and (3) to examine the relationships among these outcomes and quality of life | PWB and mental health recovery improved over the course of the 2-year treatment. DUP was associated with the Positive Relationships and Environmental Mastery dimensions of PWB. | The intervention yielded fixed effect sizes (time×group) ranging from |
| Chan et al 2015 | Meaning in Life Questionnaire (MLQ). | 744 students (mean age=17.9 years) | Longitudinal study | To test associations between religiosity and sense of meaning and purpose and depressive symptoms. | Religiosity was more consistently linked with a greater sense of meaning and purpose than with fewer depressive symptoms across the transition to adulthood, suggesting that it may be particularly important for eudaimonic well-being. | Not available |
| Chaves et al (2016) | Beck Depression Inventory-II | 96 adult women (mean age =52.02 years) with a DSM-IV diagnosis of major depression or dysthymia | Randomized controlled trial | To compare the efficacy of a positive psychology intervention (PPI) with a cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) | Both interventions were effective in reducing psychopathology and increasing positive functioning, but there were no significant differences in terms of depressive symptoms, nor well-being dimensions | Effect sizes (time ×group interaction) ranged between η2=0.006 and 0.01 for well-being measures; and from η2=0.000 to 0.01 for distress measures |
| de Manincor et al (2016) | DASS 21 items | 101 individuals (mean age=39.5 years) with mild to moderate depressive symptoms | Randomized controlled trial | To test the effectiveness of a 6-week individualized yoga intervention in the reduction of symptoms of depression and/or anxiety, and associated increases in mental health and well-being | There were statistically significant differences between yoga treatment and control group on reduction of depression and on improvement of mental well-being and resilience at post-therapy. These differences were not significant at a 6- week follow-up . | Adjusted mean differences (AMD) at post intervention ranged from −0.50 for depression to 0.47 for resilience to 0.27 for flourishing |
| Dezutter et al (2014) | Meaning in Life- MLQ, | 8492 university students (mean age=19.98 year) | Descriptive study, cluster analyses | To identify distinct profiles based on the dimensions of Presence of Meaning and Search for Meaning in a sample of emerging adults. | 5 clusters were found: “High Presence–High Search”, “Undifferentiated” “High Presence–Low Search”, “Low Presence–High Search”, and “Low Presence–Low Search” Individuals in the High Presence–Low Search cluster reported the highest levels of positive psychosocial functioning, as well as the lowest levels of negative psychosocial functioning. Individuals in the Low Presence–Low Search cluster seemed to be the most poorly adapted group, with the lowest levels of positive psychosocial functioning and the highest levels of negative psychosocial functioning. | Effect sizes for differences among the clusters ranged from η2=0.05 for depression to η2=0.17 for eudaimonia and life satisfaction |
| Fianco et al (2015) | Caregiver Burden Inventory (CBI), | 91 caregivers (mean age=50.4 years) | Cross-sectional study | To investigate the association between perceived levels of burden and well-being indicators among informal caregivers. | Participants perceiving high burden reported higher levels of depression lower life satisfaction and lower resilience than participants perceiving low burden. Life satisfaction was the best predictor of perceived burden, while depression did not provide significant contribution. | Not available |
| Grouden and Jose (2014) | Eudaimonic and Hedonic Happiness Investigation (EHHI). | 247 individuals (Mean age =44.28 years) | Cross-national study | To examine how central sources of meaning varied according to age, gender, and level of education, and whether these sources predicted well-being differentially | Family was the most important source of meaning in life, followed by interpersonal relationships, personal growth and work. Differences were found by age, gender, and amount of education. Younger individuals were more likely to find personal growth meaningful, whereas older people were more likely to find standard of living and community activities meaningful. | Multivariate main effect of age (partial η2=0.08), for personal growth (η2= 0.03). Main effect for educational level (η2=0.09) on family |
| Hallam et al (2014) | Adolescent eudaimonic behaviors at age 19–20 years. | 991 young adults (age range: 19–24 years) | Cohort longitudinal study | To examine prospective relationships between adolescence eudaimonic values development and indicators of emotional competence and psychopathology in young adulthood | No evidence of a direct prospective relationship between adolescent eudaimonic behaviors and anxious-depressive symptoms. Findings suggest that eudaimonic values development in adolescence may indirectly reduce risk for anxious-depressive symptoms in young adulthood through a process of promoting emotional competence across emerging adulthood | Not available |
| Harris et al (2018) | Depression Anxiety Stress Scales (DASS- 21); | 88 dental hygiene students (age range 18–49) from UK and Australia | Cross-sectional, comparative study | To explore United Kingdom and Australian dental hygiene and dental therapy students’ perception of stress and well-being during their undergraduate education. | Purpose in life and self-acceptance positively correlated with hope agency, and negatively correlated with the depression subscale of the DASS. The majority of respondents reported levels of depression, anxiety and stress to be within the normal- to-moderate range. All students reported high levels of positive well-being, with no significant differences between the 2 countries. | Not available |
| Kryza-Lacombe et al (2018) | Hedonic Eudaimonic Motives for Activities (HEMA) scale 9 items | 119 Undergraduate students (Mean age=21.24 years) | Cross-sectional study | To investigate hedonic and eudaimonic motives as predictors of academic achievement and negative emotional states in a sample of college students with diverse cultural and socioeconomic backgrounds | 35 individuals (29.4%) fell into the Full Life group; 30 (25.2%) into the Eudaimonia Life group; 31 (26.1%) into the Hedonic Life group and 23 (19.3%) fell into the Empty Life group. Individuals with high levels of both Hedonia and Eudaimonia (the Full Life) had higher academic performance compared to individuals with low Eudaimonia. Eudaimonia was also significantly negatively associated with depression and stress | Differences among eudaimonia group on grade point average (GPA): η2=0.10; on depression score:partial η2= 0.08. |
| Merrick et al (2017) | Hedonic and Eudaimonic Motives for Activities scale (HEMA-R). | 99 participants from six organizations providing autism-specific adult services (years 42.2) | Cross-sectional, descriptive study | To investigate the relationships between motivational orientation (eudaimonic or hedonic), challenging behavior frequency and type and psychological impacts (anxiety, depression and life satisfaction). | Eudaimonic motivation significantly reduced the likelihood of anxiety while also predicted higher life satisfaction. Having high levels of eudaimonic motivation appeared to moderate the impact of weekly challenging behavior exposure on anxiety. No motivational orientation or challenging behavior factor significantly predicted depression. | Not available |
| Muñiz-Velázquez et al (2017) | Pemberton Happiness Index (11 items) | 327 Spanish consumers (mean age=38.69 years) | Cross-sectional, decriptive study | To investigate the links between psychological well-being and materialism and between depression and materialism | Only explicit measures of materialism were associated with self-reported happiness and depression. Specifically, increased happiness and less depressive symptoms were observed in those participants with lower explicit materialism. | Not available |
| Osafo Hounkpatin et al (2015) | Ryff Psychological Well-being (PWB) | Participants were from the Wisconsin Longitudinal Study (WLS), a cohort of 10,317 individuals (age range 53–65 years) who graduated from Wisconsin high schools in 1957 | Longitudinal, cohort study | To examine how personality change relates to changes in other well-being measures such as depression, hostility, and life satisfaction in order to assess the importance of personality change for PWB over other well-being measures. | Personality change was significantly associated with change in psychological well-being (PWB). Moreover, personality change was more strongly related to change in PWB than changes in other well-being indicators such as depression, hostility and life satisfaction. | Not available |
| Pots et al (2014) | CES-D | 151 adults (mean age=48 years) from the general population | Randomized conntrolled study | To evaluate a community-based mindfullness intervention vs waiting list in adults with mild to moderate depressive symptomatology | Significant reductions in depression, anxiety, and improvements in mindfulness and mental health were found in the mindfullnes condition. These improvemets were maintained at follow-up | Moderate effect sizes on depressive symptoms at post-treatment (d=0.50) and follow-up (d=0.40). Moderate to large effect sizes on eudaimonia at post-treatment (d=0.34); and at follow-up (d=0.56). |
| Quitasol et al (2018). | Beck Depression | 51 patients with a diagnosis for major depressive disorder (mean age=35.30 years) | Randomized,controlled study, with a longitudinal design | To examine the role of psychological need fulfillment in a clinical sample undergoing treatment for major depressive disorder (CBT vs antidepressants). | Psychological need increased over the course of treatment and did not differ significantly between treatment conditions. Increases in psychological need were associated with decreases in depression severity over and above the effects of time, cognitive errors, and dysfunctional attitudes. | Not available |
| Ravert et al (2019) | Waterman Questionnaire on Eudaimonic Well-being. Ryff’ PWB 18 | 8020 undergraduate students (mean age=20 years) | Cross-sectional study | To examine how sensation seeking was associated with well-being in a large, multiethnic sample of college-attending emerging adults. | Eudaimonic and psychological well-being were both associated with being female and with low levels of depressive symptoms. Eudaimonic and psychological well- being were found to be associated with high novelty seeking but with low intensity seeking, This latter dimnesion was associated with high levels of risk behavior. In contrast, novelty sensation seeking was not significantly associated with risk behavior. | Not available |
| Routledge et al (2016) | Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale (DASS-42); | 1486 twins (mean age=39.79 years) | Cross-sectional, descriptive study | To examine the relationship between mental well-being and the normative range of anxiety and depression symptoms. | An absence of clinically significant symptoms of depression and anxiety did not necessarily indicate that an individual is flourishing. Both unique and shared genetic and environmental factors may determine why some individuals flourish in the absence of symptoms while others do not. | Not available |
| Schotanus-Dijkstra et al (2017) | 14-item Mental Health Continuum MHC-SF, | 275 participants (mean age=48 years) | Randomized controlled trial, with longitudinal design | To examine a 9-week comprehensive positive self-help intervention with email support (TL-E) in enhancing well-being and flourishing and decreasing anxiety and depressive symptoms in a non-clinical sample. | At post-intervention, there were significant more improvements on mental well-being and depression in the email support group versus control group. The proportion of flourishing in the TL-E group increased from 7% to 30% after 3 months and to 34% after 6 months . All within group effects were maintained up to 12 months. | Effect size d for well-being measures ranged from d=0.34 to 0.69. |
| Seow et al (2016) | Positive Mental Health instrument (47 items) | 218 outpatients with affective disorders (38.4 years) | Cross-sectional study | To assess the level of PMH, in a group of outpatients with affective disorders; to evaluate the sociodemographic and clinical correlates of PMH, and the association of PMH with life satisfaction and general functioning | The mean PMH total scores did not differ among groups across gender, ethnicity, education, diagnosis, and clinical status even though PMH scores varied largely within patients with depressive and anxiety disorders. PMH was associated with both life satisfaction and general functioning. | Not available |
| Singh et al (2015) | Mental Health Continuum (MHC) | 539 Indian students (age range: 13–18 years) | Cross--sectional, descriptive study | To estimate the prevalence of mental health in Indian adolescents and to examine its associations with mental distress and psychosocial functioning, | 46.4% participants were flourishing, 51.2% were moderately mentally healthy, and only 2.4% were languishing. Flourishing students reported lower prevalence of depression and adjustment difficulties, and more prosocial behavior. | Differences according to flourishing groups had significant effects for adjustment difficulties (partial h=0.06) and for prosocial behaviors (partial h2=0.09) |
| Tecuta and Tomba (2018) | Subjective Incompetence Scale (SIS), | 60 female outpatients with eating disorders (mean age =27.83 years) | Longitudinal study | To investigate subjective incompetence and whether its early modification in therapy was associated with treatment response in terms of both psychological distress and well-being. | Gains in three PWB dimensions (environmental mastery, purpose in life, self-acceptance) were predicted by changes in subjective incompetence and by levels of depression. | Partial ƞ2 for depression=0.318 (post-treatment) |
| Teismann et al (2018) | Positive mental health scale (PMH-scale | 130 adult outpatients (mean age=41.98 years) suffering from panic disorder, agoraphobia, or specific phobia | Longitudinal study | To evaluate the asso ciation between (1) pre-treatment positive mental health and post-treatment remission status as well as symptom severity and between (2) post-treatment positive mental health, remission status and symptom severity at a 6-month follow-up | Pre-treatment positive mental health was the only predictor of post-treatment symptom severity and remission status. Post-treatment positive mental health and avoidance behavior predicted symptom severity and remission status at the follow-up assessment 6 months after treatment termination. | Not available |
| Trompetter et al (2017) | Mental Health Continuum – Short Form (MHC-SF) | 349 participants, | Cross-sectional study | To assess if self-compassion mediated the relationship between positive mental health and psychopathology. | Self-compassion significantly mediated the negative relationship between positive mental health and psychopathology. Individuals with high levels of positive mental health possessed self-compassion skills that promoted resilience against psychopathology | k2=0.22 (mediation of self- compassion on positive mental health and psychopathology) |
| Walker and Lampropoulos (2014) | MHC-SF, 14 items, | 94 college students (mean age =20.67 years) with mild or more depressive symptoms | Randomized controlled trial | To compare the effects of different homework assignments (CBT or positive psychology intervention) vs waiting list on mental health, symptoms and positive states | Homework assignments based on CBT and positive psychology were equally effective in reducing depressive symptoms and increasing positive affect compared to a control group. | The intervention accounted for 24% of the variance in depression. Differences between control and active treatment: Cohen’s d=1.38 |
| Ziadni et al (2017) | Ryff SPWB | 415 participants (mean age=48.3 years) | Cross-sectional and longitudinal study | To examine interrelationships among three affect regulation constructs: alexithymia, defense mechanisms, and ego strength and their influence on well-being and depression, both cross-sectionally and over a 6-year period | Alexithymia and depression and well-being dimensions were inversely correlated and correlated to the use of immature defense mechanisms. Well-being dimensions were significantly associated with the use of more mature defense and with higher ego strengts. low alexithymia, more mature defenses, and high ego strength at baseline predicted increases in well-being, but not changes in depression 6 years later, suggesting an important difference between well-being and depression in long-term outcomes. | Not available |
Type of studies included in the review
| Type of study | Number of articles |
|---|---|
| Cross-sectional (comparative design) | 8 |
| Cross-sectional (descriptive design) | 8 |
| Longitudinal study | 8 |
| Twin study | 2 |
| Randomized controlled study | 8 |
Instruments used to assess eudaimonia and depression
| Measures of eudaimonia | Number of articles |
|---|---|
| Psychological Well-being scale - PWB | 13 |
| Mental Health Continuum (MHC) | 6 |
| Meaning in Life Questionnaire (MLQ) | 2 |
| Flourishing Scale | 2 |
| Eudaimonic and Hedonic Happiness Investigation (EHHI) | 2 |
| Pemberton Happiness Index | 2 |
| Hedonic and Eudaimonic Motives for Activities (HEMA) | 2 |
| Adolescents Eudaimonic Behavior – Social Capital | 1 |
| Balanced Measure of Psychological Needs (BMPN) | 1 |
| Basic Psychological Needs Scale | 1 |
| Cantril Ladder | 1 |
| COMPAS-W of well-being | 1 |
| Elevation Experience Scale | 1 |
| Orienation to happiness | 1 |
| Questionnaire for Eudaimonic Well-being | 1 |
| Warwick–Edinburgh Mental Well-being | 1 |
| Depression Anxiety Stress Scale – DASS | 11 |
| Centers for Epidemiological Studies – Depression (CES-D) | 10 |
| Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scales (HADS) | 4 |
| Beck Depression Inventory | 3 |
| Edinburgh Postnatal Depression | 2 |
| Anxiety and Depression Subscale Achenbach System of Empirical-based Assessment | 1 |
| Clagary Depression Scale | 1 |
| Behavior Activation for Depression Scale | 1 |
| Major Depressive Inventory | 1 |
| Patient Health Questionnarie | 1 |
Populations evaluated in eudaimonia and depression
| Type of populations | Number of articles | Number of individuals |
|---|---|---|
| Twins | 2 | 44,913 |
| Young populations, college, or university students | 10 | 19,415 |
| Adult, general populations | 14 | 17,429 |
| Adult clinical populations (anxiety, depressive disorders, and eating psychotic disorders) | 8 | 1436 |
| Total number of individuals | 81,987 |