Toward a theoretical model of quality-of-life appraisal: Implications of findings from studies of response shift

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Mounting evidence for response shifts in quality of life (QOL) appraisal indicates the need to include direct measurement of the appraisal process itself as a necessary part of QOL assessment. We propose that directly assessing QOL appraisal processes will not on...

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Main Authors: Schwartz Carolyn E, Rapkin Bruce D
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2004-03-01
Series:Health and Quality of Life Outcomes
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.hqlo.com/content/2/1/14
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spelling doaj-fb99231871ef41d28a49ac5b8eae9ea32020-11-25T00:36:41ZengBMCHealth and Quality of Life Outcomes1477-75252004-03-01211410.1186/1477-7525-2-14Toward a theoretical model of quality-of-life appraisal: Implications of findings from studies of response shiftSchwartz Carolyn ERapkin Bruce D<p>Abstract</p> <p>Mounting evidence for response shifts in quality of life (QOL) appraisal indicates the need to include direct measurement of the appraisal process itself as a necessary part of QOL assessment. We propose that directly assessing QOL appraisal processes will not only improve our ability to interpret QOL scores in the traditional sense, but will also yield a deeper understanding of the appraisal process in the attribution of and divergence in meaning. The published evidence for response shift is reviewed, and an assessment paradigm is proposed that includes the explicit measurement of QOL appraisal process parameters: 1) induction of a frame of reference; 2) recall and sampling of salient experiences; 3) standards of comparison used to appraise experiences; and 4) subjective algorithm used to prioritize and combine appraisals to arrive at a QOL rating. A QOL Appraisal Profile, which measures key appraisal processes, is introduced as an adjunct to existing QOL scales. The proposed theoretical model, building on the Sprangers and Schwartz (1999) model and highlighting appraisal processes, provides a fully testable theoretical treatment of QOL and change in QOL, suggesting hypothesized causal relationships and explanatory pathways for both cross-sectional and longitudinal QOL research.</p> http://www.hqlo.com/content/2/1/14quality of life assessmentappraisalresponse shift theoryindividual differences.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Schwartz Carolyn E
Rapkin Bruce D
spellingShingle Schwartz Carolyn E
Rapkin Bruce D
Toward a theoretical model of quality-of-life appraisal: Implications of findings from studies of response shift
Health and Quality of Life Outcomes
quality of life assessment
appraisal
response shift theory
individual differences.
author_facet Schwartz Carolyn E
Rapkin Bruce D
author_sort Schwartz Carolyn E
title Toward a theoretical model of quality-of-life appraisal: Implications of findings from studies of response shift
title_short Toward a theoretical model of quality-of-life appraisal: Implications of findings from studies of response shift
title_full Toward a theoretical model of quality-of-life appraisal: Implications of findings from studies of response shift
title_fullStr Toward a theoretical model of quality-of-life appraisal: Implications of findings from studies of response shift
title_full_unstemmed Toward a theoretical model of quality-of-life appraisal: Implications of findings from studies of response shift
title_sort toward a theoretical model of quality-of-life appraisal: implications of findings from studies of response shift
publisher BMC
series Health and Quality of Life Outcomes
issn 1477-7525
publishDate 2004-03-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Mounting evidence for response shifts in quality of life (QOL) appraisal indicates the need to include direct measurement of the appraisal process itself as a necessary part of QOL assessment. We propose that directly assessing QOL appraisal processes will not only improve our ability to interpret QOL scores in the traditional sense, but will also yield a deeper understanding of the appraisal process in the attribution of and divergence in meaning. The published evidence for response shift is reviewed, and an assessment paradigm is proposed that includes the explicit measurement of QOL appraisal process parameters: 1) induction of a frame of reference; 2) recall and sampling of salient experiences; 3) standards of comparison used to appraise experiences; and 4) subjective algorithm used to prioritize and combine appraisals to arrive at a QOL rating. A QOL Appraisal Profile, which measures key appraisal processes, is introduced as an adjunct to existing QOL scales. The proposed theoretical model, building on the Sprangers and Schwartz (1999) model and highlighting appraisal processes, provides a fully testable theoretical treatment of QOL and change in QOL, suggesting hypothesized causal relationships and explanatory pathways for both cross-sectional and longitudinal QOL research.</p>
topic quality of life assessment
appraisal
response shift theory
individual differences.
url http://www.hqlo.com/content/2/1/14
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