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      Hospitality as the bridge: advancing transformative service research towards human flourishing

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      The Service Industries Journal
      Informa UK Limited

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          New Well-being Measures: Short Scales to Assess Flourishing and Positive and Negative Feelings

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            The mental health continuum: from languishing to flourishing in life.

            This paper introduces and applies an operationalization of mental health as a syndrome of symptoms of positive feelings and positive functioning in life. Dimensions and scales of subjective well-being are reviewed and conceived of as mental health symptoms. A diagnosis of the presence of mental health, described as flourishing, and the absence of mental health, characterized as languishing, is applied to data from the 1995 Midlife in the United States study of adults between the ages of 25 and 74 (n = 3,032). Findings revealed that 17.2 percent fit the criteria for flourishing, 56.6 percent were moderately mentally healthy, 12.1 percent of adults fit the criteria for languishing, and 14.1 percent fit the criteria for DSM-III-R major depressive episode (12-month), of which 9.4 percent were not languishing and 4.7 percent were also languishing. The risk of a major depressive episode was two times more likely among languishing than moderately mentally healthy adults, and nearly six times greater among languishing than flourishing adults. Multivariate analyses revealed that languishing and depression were associated with significant psychosocial impairment in terms of perceived emotional health, limitations of activities of daily living, and workdays lost or cutback. Flourishing and moderate mental health were associated with superior profiles of psychosocial functioning. The descriptive epidemiology revealed that males, older adults, more educated individuals, and married adults were more likely to be mentally healthy. Implications for the conception of mental health and the treatment and prevention of mental illness are discussed.
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              Positive affect and the complex dynamics of human flourishing.

              Extending B. L. Fredrickson's (1998) broaden-and-build theory of positive emotions and M. Losada's (1999) nonlinear dynamics model of team performance, the authors predict that a ratio of positive to negative affect at or above 2.9 will characterize individuals in flourishing mental health. Participants (N=188) completed an initial survey to identify flourishing mental health and then provided daily reports of experienced positive and negative emotions over 28 days. Results showed that the mean ratio of positive to negative affect was above 2.9 for individuals classified as flourishing and below that threshold for those not flourishing. Together with other evidence, these findings suggest that a set of general mathematical principles may describe the relations between positive affect and human flourishing. ((c) 2005 APA, all rights reserved).
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                The Service Industries Journal
                The Service Industries Journal
                Informa UK Limited
                0264-2069
                1743-9507
                June 11 2023
                April 08 2023
                June 11 2023
                : 43
                : 7-8
                : 423-453
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Hospitality Administration, Boston University, Boston, MA, USA
                Article
                10.1080/02642069.2023.2197222
                4a523f49-feda-48f5-a361-d416a5c1d86d
                © 2023
                History

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