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      Exploring constructs of well-being, happiness and quality of life

      research-article
      1 , , 2
      PeerJ
      PeerJ Inc.
      Quality of life, Well-being, Happiness, Measurement, Life satisfaction

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          Abstract

          Background

          Existing definitions of happiness, subjective well-being, and quality of life suggest conceptual overlap between these constructs. This study explored the relationship between these well-being constructs by applying widely used measures with satisfactory psychometric properties.

          Materials and Methods

          University students ( n = 180) completed widely used well-being measures including the Oxford Happiness Questionnaire (OHQ), the World Health Organization Quality of Life Questionnaire, the Satisfaction with Life Scale, and the Positive and Negative Affect Scale. We analyzed the data using correlation, regression, and exploratory factor analysis.

          Results

          All included well-being measures demonstrated high loadings on the global well-being construct that explains about 80% of the variance in the OHQ, the psychological domain of Quality of Life and subjective well-being. The results show high positive correlations between happiness, psychological and health domains of quality of life, life satisfaction, and positive affect. Social and environmental domains of quality of life were poor predictors of happiness and subjective well-being after controlling for psychological quality of life.

          Conclusion

          Together, these data provide support for a global well-being dimension and interchangeable use of terms happiness, subjective well-being, and psychological quality of life with the current sample and measures. Further investigation with larger heterogeneous samples and other well-being measures is warranted.

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          Most cited references34

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          New Well-being Measures: Short Scales to Assess Flourishing and Positive and Negative Feelings

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            The World Health Organization Quality of Life Assessment (WHOQOL): development and general psychometric properties.

            This paper reports on the field testing, empirical derivation and psychometric properties of the World Health Organisation Quality of Life assessment (the WHOQOL). The steps are presented from the development of the initial pilot version of the instrument to the field trial version, the so-called WHOQOL-100. The instrument has been developed collaboratively in a number of centres in diverse cultural settings over several years; data are presented on the performance of the instrument in 15 different settings worldwide.
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              Happiness is everything, or is it? Explorations on the meaning of psychological well-being.

              Carol Ryff (1989)
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                PeerJ
                PeerJ
                PeerJ
                PeerJ
                PeerJ
                PeerJ Inc. (San Francisco, USA )
                2167-8359
                1 June 2018
                2018
                : 6
                : e4903
                Affiliations
                [1 ] School of Medicine, University of Auckland , Auckland, New Zealand
                [2 ] School of Social Sciences and Public Policy, Auckland University of Technology , Auckland, New Zealand
                Article
                4903
                10.7717/peerj.4903
                5985772
                29876148
                0e3e3d8d-631f-4cca-86bc-2a0877620505
                © 2018 Medvedev and Landhuis

                This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.

                History
                : 10 February 2018
                : 15 May 2018
                Funding
                The authors received no funding for this work.
                Categories
                Global Health
                Psychiatry and Psychology
                Statistics

                quality of life,well-being,happiness,measurement,life satisfaction

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