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Evaluting the Questionnaire on Well-Being: A Clinically Informed Measurement

Last week, my colleagues and I published a paper in the journal Cognitive Behaviour Therapy about a new clinically-informed instrument that quantifies subjective well-being: The Questionnaire on Well-Being (QWB).

The QWB was developed by clinicians for clinicians and researchers to meet the demand for a comprehensive index of subjective well-being, and inform clinical practice and idiosyncratic case formulation when treating depression.

In parallel to publishing academic papers, the Cognitive Behaviour Therapy journal maintains a website that functions as the pop-science version of the papers published in the actual journal. This facilitates effective dissemination of complex research findings, and thus I was happy to be invited to write a blog post for this pop-science version of the Cognitive Behaviour Therapy journal.

You can read my blog post here or by clicking the embed below.

Read the full paper here: Hlynsson, J. I., Sjöberg, A., Ström, L., & Carlbring, P. (in press). Evaluating the reliability and validity of the questionnaire on well-being: A validation study for a clinically informed measurement of subjective well-being. Cognitive Behaviour Therapyhttps://doi.org/10.1080/16506073.2024.2402992

The post Evaluting the Questionnaire on Well-Being: A Clinically Informed Measurement first appeared on Jón Ingi Hlynsson.


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