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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The scientific evidence supporting the management of the chronically ill in a positive psychological perspective in
opposition to traditional pathological approach is scarce. This study examines issues associated with recovery of
health status in heart failure, in particular hope, affection, and happiness. We use a longitudinal study of 128
symptomatic patients who after medical intervention reported improved quality of life and function at 3-month
follow-up. We evaluated the contribution of happiness, hope and affection, individually and as a whole, in the
quality of life and functionality of individuals with heart failure. Happiness (Subjective Happiness Scale), Hope
(HOPE Scale), and affection (PANAS (positive and negative affect schedule)) were determined before medical
intervention. Individually, we found that happiness is correlated with the quality of life and functionality, hope to
self-efficacy dimension of the quality of life scale, positive affect to functionality and negative affect with
symptoms dimension, quality of life dimension, and overall sum of the quality of life scale. Overall, we found that
happiness has a unique contribution to the quality of life, except in self-efficacy dimension where hope takes this
contribution and positive affect has a unique contribution to the functionality in this short-term follow-up. The
results highlight the importance of positive variables to health outcomes for people with heart failure and should be
considered in intervention programs for this syndrome.
Description
Keywords
Happiness Hope Affection Quality of life Functionality Heart failure
Citation
Psychology Research, 2 (9), 532-539