Relationships Among Occupation/Activity Patterns, Health and Stress Perceptions, and Life Orientation in Well Adults

Background: This study examined the relationships among activity choices, perceived health, stress, and life orientation (optimism-pessimism) in a general population of 675 healthy adults ranging in age from 18-91 years. The objective was to examine assumptions that occupational scientists and pract...

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Main Authors: Barbara Prudhomme White, Amy Ma, Deborah Whitney
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Western Michigan University 2014-10-01
Series:Open Journal of Occupational Therapy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://scholarworks.wmich.edu/ojot/vol2/iss4/5/
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spelling doaj-a51be403f2e04286add2e9c78afdf03e2020-11-24T23:24:38ZengWestern Michigan University Open Journal of Occupational Therapy 2168-64082168-64082014-10-0124510.15453/2168-6408.1088Relationships Among Occupation/Activity Patterns, Health and Stress Perceptions, and Life Orientation in Well AdultsBarbara Prudhomme White0Amy Ma1Deborah Whitney2University of New HampshireUniversity of New HampshireWhittier Rehabilitation HospitalBackground: This study examined the relationships among activity choices, perceived health, stress, and life orientation (optimism-pessimism) in a general population of 675 healthy adults ranging in age from 18-91 years. The objective was to examine assumptions that occupational scientists and practitioners hold regarding the relationships among health factors and engagement in activities/occupations. Method: The study used four self-report measures, including a customized activity card sort that asked participants about both healthy and unhealthy activity patterns. Responses were then compared with the participants’ perceptions of overall health, stress levels, and degrees of optimism and pessimism (life orientation). Results: Major findings confirmed that being engaged in more activities overall is aligned with more optimally perceived health, positive life orientation, and lower stress. However, participation in unhealthy activities negatively affected overall health, stress perception, and life orientation. The study also confirmed that women tend to have higher perceived stress than men and that caring for others is associated with more positive health ratings. Conclusion: The amount and type of activity participation appears to matter for even healthy individuals in terms of overall health, stress perception, and life orientation. This study confirms the importance of participating in a wide repertoire of activities and underscores the need for practitioners to ask clients about engagement in unhealthy activities as well as healthy ones.http://scholarworks.wmich.edu/ojot/vol2/iss4/5/OccupationParticipationStressHealth
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Barbara Prudhomme White
Amy Ma
Deborah Whitney
spellingShingle Barbara Prudhomme White
Amy Ma
Deborah Whitney
Relationships Among Occupation/Activity Patterns, Health and Stress Perceptions, and Life Orientation in Well Adults
Open Journal of Occupational Therapy
Occupation
Participation
Stress
Health
author_facet Barbara Prudhomme White
Amy Ma
Deborah Whitney
author_sort Barbara Prudhomme White
title Relationships Among Occupation/Activity Patterns, Health and Stress Perceptions, and Life Orientation in Well Adults
title_short Relationships Among Occupation/Activity Patterns, Health and Stress Perceptions, and Life Orientation in Well Adults
title_full Relationships Among Occupation/Activity Patterns, Health and Stress Perceptions, and Life Orientation in Well Adults
title_fullStr Relationships Among Occupation/Activity Patterns, Health and Stress Perceptions, and Life Orientation in Well Adults
title_full_unstemmed Relationships Among Occupation/Activity Patterns, Health and Stress Perceptions, and Life Orientation in Well Adults
title_sort relationships among occupation/activity patterns, health and stress perceptions, and life orientation in well adults
publisher Western Michigan University
series Open Journal of Occupational Therapy
issn 2168-6408
2168-6408
publishDate 2014-10-01
description Background: This study examined the relationships among activity choices, perceived health, stress, and life orientation (optimism-pessimism) in a general population of 675 healthy adults ranging in age from 18-91 years. The objective was to examine assumptions that occupational scientists and practitioners hold regarding the relationships among health factors and engagement in activities/occupations. Method: The study used four self-report measures, including a customized activity card sort that asked participants about both healthy and unhealthy activity patterns. Responses were then compared with the participants’ perceptions of overall health, stress levels, and degrees of optimism and pessimism (life orientation). Results: Major findings confirmed that being engaged in more activities overall is aligned with more optimally perceived health, positive life orientation, and lower stress. However, participation in unhealthy activities negatively affected overall health, stress perception, and life orientation. The study also confirmed that women tend to have higher perceived stress than men and that caring for others is associated with more positive health ratings. Conclusion: The amount and type of activity participation appears to matter for even healthy individuals in terms of overall health, stress perception, and life orientation. This study confirms the importance of participating in a wide repertoire of activities and underscores the need for practitioners to ask clients about engagement in unhealthy activities as well as healthy ones.
topic Occupation
Participation
Stress
Health
url http://scholarworks.wmich.edu/ojot/vol2/iss4/5/
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