Enhancing Well-Being Measurement in Health Research, Clinical Care, and Population Health Promotion
Date: June 14, 2021
Event Description
View meeting report [2.92 MB PDF]
The Office of Patient Centered Care & Cultural Transformation at the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) and the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH) at the National Institutes of Health convened a virtual meeting on June 14, 2021, to discuss potential strategies to improve measurement of holistic well-being outcomes in research, clinical care, and population health promotion. The meeting provided a forum in which researchers and other stakeholders could learn about different approaches to measuring well-being, as well as the relevance of measuring well-being within different organizational contexts and populations.
Entitled “Enhancing Well-Being Measurement in Health Research, Clinical Care, and Population Health Promotion,” the meeting brought together many prominent leaders in the field of well-being measurement research to discuss the state of the science.
Panel topics included:
- Why is well-being important to assess?
- What aspects of well-being are most important to assess?
- What are the different approaches for measuring well-being?
Three breakout sessions focused on the following topics:
- Aspects of well-being that are important to consider in health research, clinical care, and population health promotion
- Ways to promote more attention to well-being measurement in health research, clinical care, and population health promotion
- Well-being as a “common language” to promote equity across diverse populations