Higher baseline levels of emotional well-being significantly predicted better long-term recovery and survival in physically ill patients, with an overall likelihood ratio of 1.14.
Meta-Analysis (n=12,744)
Does emotional well-being improve recovery and survival in physically ill patients?
Higher levels of emotional well-being are associated with a small but significant improvement in long-term recovery and survival among physically ill patients.
Estimación del efecto: LR 1.14
valor p: p=<0.001
This meta-analysis synthesized studies on emotional well-being as predictor of the prognosis of physical illness, while in addition evaluating the impact of putative moderators, namely constructs of well-being, health-related outcome, year of publication, follow-up time and methodological quality of the included studies. The search in reference lists and electronic databases (Medline and PsycInfo) identified 17 eligible studies examining the impact of general well-being, positive affect and life satisfaction on recovery and survival in physically ill patients. Meta-analytically combining these studies revealed a Likelihood Ratio of 1.14, indicating a small but significant effect. Higher levels of emotional well-being are beneficial for recovery and survival in physically ill patients. The findings show that emotional well-being predicts long-term prognosis of physical illness. This suggests that enhancement of emotional well-being may improve the prognosis of physical illness, which should be investigated by future research.
Lamers et al. (Thu,) conducted a meta-analysis in Physical illness (n=12,744). Emotional well-being (positive affect, life satisfaction, general well-being) vs. Lower levels of emotional well-being was evaluated on Prognosis of physical illness (survival and recovery) (LR 1.14, p=<0.001). Higher baseline levels of emotional well-being significantly predicted better long-term recovery and survival in physically ill patients, with an overall likelihood ratio of 1.14.
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