Article

Assessment of positive functioning in clinical psychology: Theoretical and practical issues

Details

Citation

Joseph S & Wood AM (2010) Assessment of positive functioning in clinical psychology: Theoretical and practical issues. Clinical Psychology Review, 30 (7), pp. 830-838. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cpr.2010.01.002

Abstract
Positive psychology has led to an increasing emphasis on the promotion of positive functioning in clinical psychology research and practice, raising issues of how to assess the positive in clinical setting. Three key considerations are presented. First, existing clinical measures may already be assessing positive functioning, if positive and negative functioning exist on a single continuum (such as on bipolar dimensions from happiness to depression, and from anxiety to relaxation). Second, specific measures of positive functioning (e.g., eudemonic well-being) could be used in conjunction with existing clinical scales. Third, completely different measures would be needed depending on whether well-being is defined as emotional or medical functioning, or as humanistically orientated growth (e.g., authenticity). It is important that clinical psychologists introduce positive functioning into their research and practice in order to widen their armoury of therapeutic interventions, but in doing so researchers and practitioners need also to be aware that they are shifting the agenda of clinical psychology. As such, progress in clinical psychology moving toward the adoption of positive functioning requires reflection on epistemological foundations.

Keywords
Epistemological; Psychometric; Measurement; Well-being; Positive psychology; Happiness; Authenticity; Depression; Positive psychology; Clinical Psychology

Journal
Clinical Psychology Review: Volume 30, Issue 7

StatusPublished
Publication date30/11/2010
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/12147
PublisherElsevier
ISSN0272-7358