The well-being 5: development and validation of a diagnostic instrument to improve population well-being.

TitleThe well-being 5: development and validation of a diagnostic instrument to improve population well-being.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2014
AuthorsSears LE, Agrawal S, Sidney JA, Castle PH, Rula EY, Coberley CR, Witters D, Pope JE, Harter JK
JournalPopul Health Manag
Volume17
Issue6
Pagination357-65
Date Published2014 Dec
ISSN1942-7905
KeywordsAged, Factor Analysis, Statistical, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Personal Satisfaction, Psychometrics, Surveys and Questionnaires, United States
Abstract

Building upon extensive research from 2 validated well-being instruments, the objective of this research was to develop and validate a comprehensive and actionable well-being instrument that informs and facilitates improvement of well-being for individuals, communities, and nations. The goals of the measure were comprehensiveness, validity and reliability, significant relationships with health and performance outcomes, and diagnostic capability for intervention. For measure development and validation, questions from the Well-being Assessment and Wellbeing Finder were simultaneously administered as a test item pool to over 13,000 individuals across 3 independent samples. Exploratory factor analysis was conducted on a random selection from the first sample and confirmed in the other samples. Further evidence of validity was established through correlations to the established well-being scores from the Well-Being Assessment and Wellbeing Finder, and individual outcomes capturing health care utilization and productivity. Results showed the Well-Being 5 score comprehensively captures the known constructs within well-being, demonstrates good reliability and validity, significantly relates to health and performance outcomes, is diagnostic and informative for intervention, and can track and compare well-being over time and across groups. With this tool, well-being deficiencies within a population can be effectively identified, prioritized, and addressed, yielding the potential for substantial improvements to the health status, performance, and quality of life for individuals and cost savings for stakeholders.

DOI10.1089/pop.2013.0119
Alternate JournalPopul Health Manag
PubMed ID24892873
PubMed Central IDPMC4273178