Harnessing the power of positive psychology in self-care and health care (#224)
Background
Lifestyle medicine (which treats chronic diseases with healthy lifestyles) and positive psychology (which studies interventions for optimal functioning) are rapidly expanding. Positive health combines these fields for a state of health beyond what can be achieved by addressing traditional risk factors alone. However, individuals and health practitioners are not fully leveraging lifestyle interventions (nutrition, physical activity, stress management, sleep, avoidance of risky substances, and social connection) with positive psychology strategies. Moreover, promoting behavior change is one of the greatest challenges in health care. Positive emotions can drive health maintenance and treatment plan adherence and self-care, leading to improved health outcomes.
Aims
The goal of this positive health program is to leverage the reinforcing, reciprocal link between lifestyle medicine and positive psychology for improved health outcomes with positive health training and tools for both individuals and health providers.
Method
We’re testing an eight-week online positive health program (uniquely designed to incorporate key research-informed positive psychology elements) for feasibility in health care practice, ease of use in self-care, and practitioner and patient satisfaction. Subsequently, we will measure the impact on subjective wellbeing, e.g. satisfaction with life and flourishing scales, and extent of behavior changes achieved. Future project phases will include health measures, such as urgent care visits, cardiovascular events and diabetes status.
Results
Preliminary qualitative assessment of beta version of the positive health program revealed provider satisfaction with the range of options for positive health tool implementation. Also, individuals taking the training program independently rated the program as user-friendly. Quantitative analysis of satisfaction with life scale, flourishing scale, and health behavior action plan completion will be completed in early 2023 and presented.
Conclusion
Research-informed positive psychology training programs and tools have the potential to promote self-care and health care. Early phase evaluation shows that such programs are feasible and user-friendly with high provider and individual satisfaction. Future phases will test health behavior changes, flourishing levels, and health outcomes.
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