Ignorance of Hedonic Adaptation to Hemodialysis: A Study Using Ecological Momentary Assessment

Healthy people generally underestimate the self-reported well-being of people with disabilities and serious illnesses. The cause of this discrepancy is in dispute, and the present study provides evidence for 2 causes. First, healthy people fail to anticipate hedonic adaptation to poor health. Using...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of experimental psychology. General 2005-02, Vol.134 (1), p.3-9
Hauptverfasser: Riis, Jason, Loewenstein, George, Baron, Jonathan, Jepson, Christopher, Fagerlin, Angela, Ubel, Peter A
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container_title Journal of experimental psychology. General
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creator Riis, Jason
Loewenstein, George
Baron, Jonathan
Jepson, Christopher
Fagerlin, Angela
Ubel, Peter A
description Healthy people generally underestimate the self-reported well-being of people with disabilities and serious illnesses. The cause of this discrepancy is in dispute, and the present study provides evidence for 2 causes. First, healthy people fail to anticipate hedonic adaptation to poor health. Using an ecological momentary assessment measure of mood, the authors failed to find evidence that hemodialysis patients are less happy than healthy nonpatients are, suggesting that they have largely, if not completely, adapted to their condition. In a forecasting task, healthy people failed to anticipate this adaptation. Second, although controls understated their own mood in both an estimation task and a recall task, patients were quite accurate in both tasks. This relative negativity in controls' estimates of their own moods could also contribute to their underestimation of the moods and overall well-being of patients.
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subjects Adaptation
Adaptation, Psychological
Adjustment (to Environment)
Adolescent
Adult
Affect
Awareness
Biological and medical sciences
Chronic Illness
Disabilities
Ecological Momentary Assessment
Ecology
Emotional Adjustment
Emotional Response
Emotional States
Environment
Female
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Health
Health Status
Hemodialysis
Human
Humans
Kidney Failure, Chronic - physiopathology
Kidney Failure, Chronic - therapy
Male
Measures (Individuals)
Middle Aged
Miscellaneous
Patients
Physical Disabilities (Attitudes Toward)
Physical Illness (Attitudes Toward)
Psychological Patterns
Psychology and medicine
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Quality of Life
Renal Dialysis - psychology
Surveys and Questionnaires
Well Being
title Ignorance of Hedonic Adaptation to Hemodialysis: A Study Using Ecological Momentary Assessment
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