Defining Quality of Life: A Wild-Goose Chase?
In the last decades there has been a growing interest towards the concept of “Quality of Life” (QoL), not only in the bio-medical field, but also in other areas, such as sociology, psychology, economics, philosophy, architecture, journalism, politics, environment, sports, recreation, advertisements....
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doaj-64d0fb5d714d443092717d7ca31897172020-11-25T03:12:24ZengPsychOpenEurope's Journal of Psychology1841-04132013-02-019118520310.5964/ejop.v9i1.484ejop.v9i1.484Defining Quality of Life: A Wild-Goose Chase?Barbara Barcaccia0Giuseppe Esposito1Maria Matarese2Marta Bertolaso3Marta Elvira4Maria Grazia De Marinis5Associazione di Psicologia Cognitiva, Rome, ItalyUniversity “Tor Vergata”, Rome, ItalyUniversity Campus Bio-Medico, Rome, ItalyUniversity Campus Bio-Medico, Rome, ItalyIESE Business School, University of Navarra, Pamplona, SpainUniversity Campus Bio-Medico, Rome, ItalyIn the last decades there has been a growing interest towards the concept of “Quality of Life” (QoL), not only in the bio-medical field, but also in other areas, such as sociology, psychology, economics, philosophy, architecture, journalism, politics, environment, sports, recreation, advertisements. Nevertheless QoL does turn out to be an ambiguous and elusive concept – a precise, clear and shared definition appears to be a long way off. In this article an analysis of how QoL is interpreted and defined in various scientific articles published in the last two decades, is offered. In addition, an illustration of how widespread the use of this concept is in different fields of knowledge, the difficulties in reaching a shared understanding of QoL, the problems involved in stating clearly the construct, and a presentation of some of its conceptualizations, are provided. The importance of subjectivity in the definition of what QoL is, emerges as a key aspect. This personal and subjective dimension could be the starting point for a more thorough and holistic understanding of this concept, in which standardized sets of valid, reliable and evidence-based measures of, e.g., psychological and spiritual dimensions, are encompassed in the person’s quality of life evaluation.http://ejop.psychopen.eu/article/view/484quality of lifesubjectivityacceptancemultidimensionalityphysical healthpsychological healthethics |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Barbara Barcaccia Giuseppe Esposito Maria Matarese Marta Bertolaso Marta Elvira Maria Grazia De Marinis |
spellingShingle |
Barbara Barcaccia Giuseppe Esposito Maria Matarese Marta Bertolaso Marta Elvira Maria Grazia De Marinis Defining Quality of Life: A Wild-Goose Chase? Europe's Journal of Psychology quality of life subjectivity acceptance multidimensionality physical health psychological health ethics |
author_facet |
Barbara Barcaccia Giuseppe Esposito Maria Matarese Marta Bertolaso Marta Elvira Maria Grazia De Marinis |
author_sort |
Barbara Barcaccia |
title |
Defining Quality of Life: A Wild-Goose Chase? |
title_short |
Defining Quality of Life: A Wild-Goose Chase? |
title_full |
Defining Quality of Life: A Wild-Goose Chase? |
title_fullStr |
Defining Quality of Life: A Wild-Goose Chase? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Defining Quality of Life: A Wild-Goose Chase? |
title_sort |
defining quality of life: a wild-goose chase? |
publisher |
PsychOpen |
series |
Europe's Journal of Psychology |
issn |
1841-0413 |
publishDate |
2013-02-01 |
description |
In the last decades there has been a growing interest towards the concept of “Quality of Life” (QoL), not only in the bio-medical field, but also in other areas, such as sociology, psychology, economics, philosophy, architecture, journalism, politics, environment, sports, recreation, advertisements. Nevertheless QoL does turn out to be an ambiguous and elusive concept – a precise, clear and shared definition appears to be a long way off. In this article an analysis of how QoL is interpreted and defined in various scientific articles published in the last two decades, is offered. In addition, an illustration of how widespread the use of this concept is in different fields of knowledge, the difficulties in reaching a shared understanding of QoL, the problems involved in stating clearly the construct, and a presentation of some of its conceptualizations, are provided. The importance of subjectivity in the definition of what QoL is, emerges as a key aspect. This personal and subjective dimension could be the starting point for a more thorough and holistic understanding of this concept, in which standardized sets of valid, reliable and evidence-based measures of, e.g., psychological and spiritual dimensions, are encompassed in the person’s quality of life evaluation. |
topic |
quality of life subjectivity acceptance multidimensionality physical health psychological health ethics |
url |
http://ejop.psychopen.eu/article/view/484 |
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