Individual Quality of Life

Front Cover
C R B Joyce, Hannah McGee, Ciaran O'Boyle
Psychology Press, Jan 11, 2013 - Psychology - 246 pages

The rubric "Quality of Life" first came to the explicit attention of the medical profession a little over thirty years ago. Despite the undoubted fact that each one of us has his or her own Quality of Life, be it good or bad, there is still no general agreement about its definition, or the manner in which it should be evaluated. Although much has been written about quality of life, this work has been largely concerned with population-based studies, especially in health policy and health economics. The importance of "individual" quality of life has been neglected, in part because of a failure to define quality of life itself with sufficient care, in part perhaps because of a belief that it is impossible to develop a meaningful method of measuring individual variables.
The editors of this book believe that the primary focus of quality of life is and must continue to be the individual, who alone can define it and assess its changing personal significance. The challenge of presenting this belief

 

Contents

Specific Approaches to Individual Quality of Life Assessment
73
Applications of Individual Quality of Life Assessment
173
Future Directions
213
A Story of Virtue Lost and Regained
225
Index
233
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2013)

Joyce, C R B; McGee, Hannah; O'Boyle, Ciaran

Bibliographic information