特刊简介:改善心理健康和人口健康的干预措施

IF 2.1 Q2 PSYCHOLOGY Affective science Pub Date : 2023-03-28 DOI:10.1007/s42761-023-00184-3
Eric S. Kim, Judith T. Moskowitz, Laura D. Kubzansky
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引用次数: 0

摘要

心理疾病呈上升趋势,五分之一的美国人在任何一年都患有精神障碍。其他证据表明,随着时间的推移,心理健康状况也有所下降。鉴于越来越多的大量证据表明,心理疾病(如抑郁、焦虑、愤怒)与患慢性病和过早死亡的风险增加有关,这些趋势尤其令人担忧,而心理健康的各个方面(如积极情感、目标感和意义感、生活满意度)与身体健康结果的改善独立相关。一种探索不足但有前景的增强心理和身体健康的方法是开发一套专门针对心理健康的工具(通常被称为积极心理干预(PPI),尽管在积极心理学领域之外开发的许多干预措施也实现了这些目标)。这种干预措施有望成为改善人口健康的战略。然而,关键的知识差距阻碍了我们,我们还没有制定出一套强有力的干预策略,以有意义、持久和可扩展的方式改善心理健康,这也会对身体健康产生下游影响。本期特刊的目标是通过汇集当前的概念框架、对关键结构的批判性审查和新的经验证据来帮助解决这些知识差距,这些证据是确定和审查可以改变心理健康的干预措施所需的,特别是那些有可能在人口层面扩大规模并产生持久影响的干预措施。
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Introduction to Special Issue: Interventions to Modify Psychological Well-Being and Population Health

Psychological ill-being is on the rise, with 1 in 5 Americans suffering from a mental disorder in any given year. Additional evidence demonstrates that psychological well-being has also decreased over time. These trends are particularly worrisome given the substantial and growing body of evidence demonstrating that psychological ill-being (e.g., depression, anxiety, anger) is associated with an elevated risk of developing chronic diseases and premature mortality, while aspects of psychological well-being (e.g., positive affect, sense of purpose and meaning, life satisfaction) are independently associated with improved physical health outcomes. An underexplored but promising approach to enhancing both psychological and physical health is through developing a set of tools that specifically target psychological well-being (often referred to as positive psychological interventions (PPIs) although many interventions developed outside the field of positive psychology also achieve these goals). Such interventions hold promise as a strategy for improving population health. However, critical knowledge gaps hold us back, and we have not yet developed a robust set of intervention strategies that can improve psychological well-being in meaningful, durable, and scalable ways that would also have downstream effects on physical health. The goal of this special issue is to help address these knowledge gaps by bringing together current conceptual frameworks, critical examination of key constructs, and novel empirical evidence needed to identify and examine interventions that can modify psychological well-being, particularly those that have the potential to be scaled at the population level and with durable effects.

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Introduction to the Special Section Commentaries Affectivism and the Emotional Elephant: How a Componential Approach Can Reconcile Opposing Theories to Serve the Future of Affective Sciences A Developmental Psychobiologist’s Commentary on the Future of Affective Science Emotional Overshadowing: Pleasant and Unpleasant Cues Overshadow Neutral Cues in Human Associative Learning Emphasizing the Social in Social Emotion Regulation: A Call for Integration and Expansion
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