首页> 外文期刊>Medical decision making: An international journal of the Society for Medical Decision Making >What would it be like for me and for you? Judged impact of chronic health conditions on happiness.
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What would it be like for me and for you? Judged impact of chronic health conditions on happiness.

机译:对我和你来说会是什么样?判断慢性健康状况对幸福感的影响。

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BACKGROUND: People overestimate the impact of health conditions on happiness, putatively because they focus excessively on resulting negative consequences while disregarding the impact of other unchanged aspects of life on happiness. However, typically, inferences about accuracy have been based on a confound of the viewpoint of judgments(Self/Other) with whether the respondent has the condition (Have/Not-have)--an important issue because people often judge themselves as different to others. This study measured Haves' and Not-haves' judged impact on happiness--for self and other--of several chronic health conditions, and whether "defocusing" respondents improved judgment. METHOD: 80 Haves and 80 Not-haves predicted the impact of health conditions on their own and others' happiness using a questionnaire, after some participated in a defocusing exercise. Haves also indicated their preferences for their health condition over other conditions. RESULTS: Although Haves made more accurate forecasts than Not-haves, both overestimated the impact of health conditions on others' happiness--yet defocusing respondents prior to prediction had no effect. Haves were aware that Not-haves misjudge Haves' happiness, but underestimated the bias in Not-haves' judgments. Whereas Haves judged they were more happy than other Haves, Not-haves predicted they would be less happy than others if living with a health condition. Finally, Haves' preferences for health conditions exhibited an endowment effect. CONCLUSION: The existence of an impact bias is not attributable to the confounding of self/other and Have/Not-have in other studies. People who have a condition forecasted others' happiness more accurately, suggesting that experience of one condition helps in comprehending life with another.
机译:背景:人们高估了健康状况对幸福的影响,这可能是因为他们过分关注导致的负面后果,而忽略了生活中其他未改变的方面对幸福的影响。但是,通常,关于准确性的推论是基于对判断观点(自我/其他)与受访者是否具有条件(有/没有)的混淆,这是一个重要问题,因为人们经常认为自己与其他。这项研究测量了Haves和Not-haves判断的对几种慢性健康状况对幸福感的影响(包括自我和他人),以及“散焦”受访者是否会改善判断力。方法:在有些人参加了散焦锻炼之后,有80位富人和80位非习惯者使用问卷调查了健康状况对自己和他人幸福感的影响。 Haves还指出了他们对健康状况的偏好,而不是其他状况。结果:尽管Haves的预测比Not-haves更为准确,但两者都高估了健康状况对他​​人幸福感的影响-但在预测之前散焦受访者并没有影响。 Haves意识到“不存在”会错误地判断“ Haves”的幸福,但是低估了“不存在”判断的偏见。 Haves认为他们比其他Haves更加快乐,Not-haves预测如果生活健康的话,他们会比其他人更不快乐。最后,Haves对健康状况的偏好表现出一种effect赋效应。结论:影响偏倚的存在并不归因于其他研究中自我/他人和有/没有的混淆。有病的人可以更准确地预测他人的幸福,这表明有一种病的经历有助于理解另一种病的生活。

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