Human Well-Being Measure
(Redirected from well‐being)
A Human Well-Being Measure is a system health measure that is human measure.
- Context:
- output: a Well-Being Level (that can range from being a positive human wellbeing to negative human wellbeing).
- It can (often) correlate to Agent Survival (human thriving).
- It can be aggregated by a Society Well-Being Measure.
- It can be supported by Social Welfare Program.
- …
- Example(s):
- Counter-Example(s):
- See: Quality Of Life, Capabilities Approach, Happiness Economics, Cognate, Human Flow Experience, Workplace Wellness, Health Club, Prosocial.
References
2015
- (Wikipedia, 2015) ⇒ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/wellness Retrieved:2015-4-25.
- Wellness may refer to:
- Wellness (alternative medicine)
- Wellness (medicine), the scientific meaning: health, freedom from disease
- Wellness (pet food), a brand of dog and cat food used by the company WellPet
- Well-being (population)
- Workplace wellness
- For wellness center see:
- it:Wellness
- Wellness may refer to:
2014
- (Wikipedia, 2014) ⇒ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/well-being Retrieved:2014-4-5.
- Well-being or welfare is a general term for the condition of an individual or group, for example their social, economic, psychological, spiritual or medical state; high well-being means that, in some sense, the individual or group's experience is positive, while low well-being is associated with negative happenings.
In economics, the term is used for one or more QuantitativeTemplate:Disambiguation needed measures intended to assess the quality of life of a group, for example, in the capabilities approach and the economics of happiness. Like the related cognate terms 'wealth' and 'welfare', economics sources may contrast the state with its opposite. [1] The study of well-being is divided in subjective well-being and objective well-being.
- Well-being or welfare is a general term for the condition of an individual or group, for example their social, economic, psychological, spiritual or medical state; high well-being means that, in some sense, the individual or group's experience is positive, while low well-being is associated with negative happenings.
- ↑ • As in Journal of Economic Literature Health, education, and welfare JEL: I Subcategories at JEL: I3 - Welfare and Poverty.
• Adam Smith, 1776. The Wealth of Nations.
• Partha Dasgupta, 1993. An Inquiry into Well-Being and Destitution. Description and review.
• David S. Landes, 1998. The Wealth and Poverty of Nations. Review.
• Paul Streeten, 1999. "Henry J. Bruton, On the Search for Well Being, and Yujiro Hayami, Development Economics: From the Poverty to the Wealth of Nations," Economic Development and Cultural Change," 48(1), pp. 209-214.
2017
- (Wikipedia, 2017) ⇒ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/well-being Retrieved:2017-12-3.
- Well-being, wellbeing, or wellness is a general term for the condition of an individual or group. A high level of well-being means in some sense the individual or group's condition is positive.