Title: A Customized Individual and Organizational Wellness Assessment
1 A Customized Individual and Organizational
Wellness Assessment Reed Engel, MA, FAWHP Tessa
Kieffer, MS, CHES Mather LifeWays Institute on
Aging Evanston, Illinois Research funded by
Mather LifeWays
- Conclusions
- Satisfaction and Dimensional
- Well-being
- The results of this study suggest that
satisfaction with a particular dimension of
wellness is correlated strongly with feelings of
well-being in that particular dimension. - Participants who demonstrated high activity
levels within particular dimensions of wellness
were likely to rate both their well-being within
and satisfaction with that particular domain
high. - Furthermore, these findings indicate that
satisfaction with a particular dimension of
wellness has a positive relationship to overall
life satisfaction. - In this study, emotional and social well-being
had a stronger relationship with overall life
satisfaction than the other dimensions of
wellness. - Interestingly, while many participants rated
their well-being and their satisfaction across
most dimensions as good or excellent, they
continued to express a desire for some level of
help and support. One possible explanation for
this might be that participants who are most
interested in wellness view it as a process to be
maintained rather than a short-term goal. - Limitations and Future Directions
- The older adults in this study self-selected to
participate and responded with self-reported
data. Its likely that this was a motivated,
confident, and engaged sample which desires to
pursue opportunities for personal growth. Future
research could determine if these results can be
generalized to a wider sample of older adults at
varying levels of health, self-efficacy, and
motivation to improve their level of well-being.
Introduction The purpose of this research
project was to develop and pilot test a new
Health and Wellness Assessment tool designed
specifically for older adults. The survey
examines well-being in the six dimensions
physical, emotional, social, intellectual,
spiritual, and professional/ vocational. The
survey also measures readiness to change,
self-efficacy, life satisfaction, and use of
resources for improving wellness. This unique
approach provides targeted and tailored
individual as well as organizational reports and
feedback for goal setting and program planning.
Results Participant Characteristics A total of
259 older adults participated in this survey.
Characteristics Gender 75 female Marital
status 36 married, 34 widowed, 20 divorced
or separated, and 11 never married
Race/Ethnicity 66 Caucasian, 27 Black/African
American, and 7 Hispanic/Latino, Asian, Native
American or other Education 52 had a
bachelors level or higher degree Living
arrangements 53 lived alone, 34 with a spouse,
and 13 with family members or friends 38 lived
in a senior living community.
- Method
- Materials
- The tool was developed and pilot-tested over a
15-month period, including focus groups conducted
in senior living and community-based settings. A
total of 100 items measured the following
constructs in each of the six dimensions
wellness activities, readiness to change,
self-efficacy, social support and satisfaction,
and life impact. - Variables
- Dimensional well-being, dimensional
satisfaction, and overall satisfaction with life
were measured by single items on a 5-point scale
from 1 (very poor) to 5 (excellent). - The wellness activity scales consisted of 4-5
items that measured activity frequency by
dimension on a 5-point scale from 1 (never) to 5
(always). - The impact each dimension has on satisfaction
with life was measured on a 5-point scale from 1
(very negative) to 5 (very positive). - Desire for help and support was measured on a
4-point scale from 1 (none) to 4 (a lot). - Data Collection
- Approximately 1,225 surveys were distributed
across seven Mather LifeWays locations (three
Senior Living Residences and four Community
Cafes). A total of 259 (21) completed surveys
were returned. Recruiting efforts included
on-site informational booths and presentations, a
postcard mailing to Café customers, promotional
flyers, and staff assistance from each location.
All participants received a customized Personal
Wellness Report and Guide, which outlined
wellness strengths and opportunities for personal
growth. In addition, an aggregate organizational
report is being compiled for each pilot test site
to provide program planners with insight for
modification or future direction.
- Correlations
- All reported correlations were significant at the
0.01 level. - Dimensional ratings of well-being were
significantly correlated with overall
satisfaction with life (r .26 - .54). The
highest correlations with overall satisfaction
with life were in the emotional (r .54) and
social (r .52) domains. - Strong positive correlations were found between
dimensional ratings of well-being and dimensional
ratings of satisfaction (Spiritual (r .88),
Professional/vocational (r .85), Emotional (r
.84), Social (r .83), and Intellectual (r
.73)). Only a moderate correlation (r .68) was
found between rating of overall physical
well-being and satisfaction with physical
well-being. - Moderate correlations were found between
satisfaction ratings by dimension and the impact
each dimension has on satisfaction with life
(Professional/vocational (r .53), Emotional (r
.50), Social (r .48), Physical (r .47),
Spiritual (r .43), Intellectual (r .41)). - Moderate correlations were found between four of
the six wellness activity scales and the ratings
of dimensional well-being (Spiritual (r .65),
Emotional (r .62), Social (r .59),
Professional/vocational (r .41)). - Moderate correlations were found between
wellness activity scales and satisfaction ratings
in the Emotional (r .59), Spiritual (r .58), - Social (r .55) dimensions.
- The desire for help and support to improve
physical and emotional well-being were moderately
correlated (r .44, .40 respectively) with
overall satisfaction with life.