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Article Information:
A Conceptual Framework of Wellbeing in Some Western Nations (A Review Article)
Paul Andrew Bourne
Corresponding Author: Paul Andrew Bourne
Submitted: 2009 November, 26
Accepted: 2009 December, 16
Published: 2010 January, 20 |
Abstract:
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The aim of this study is to examine and highlight the narrow definition of wellbeing that still exists
in some contemporary Western societies. This definition is in keeping with the biomedical model that views
the exposure to specific pathogens as the cause of diseases in organisms. Such an approach began during the
130ce to 200ce in A ncient Rome, and despite the efforts of the WHO in 1946 to expand the concept, health in
Caribbean societies and in particular Jamaica is still substantially seen as the ‘absence of diseases’ or
dysfunctions in the body, which is what is used to indicate wellbeing. Health and wellbeing are
multidimensional constructs and so there is a need for academics to begin vociferously working to encapsulate
an operational definition of wellbeing that can be used in the images of wellbeing and patient care. This paper
presents and examines a conceptual framework on health (or wellbeing) from a biopsychosocial perspective,
as well as including an environmental perspective as this is in keeping with an expanded conceptualization of
health as forwarded by the WHO in its constitution. Within the discourse, arguments will be presented on both
subjective and objective measurements of wellbeing.
Key words: Biomedical model, biopsychosocial model, health, healthy life expectancy, objective wellbeing, quality of life, subjective wellbeing
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Cite this Reference:
Paul Andrew Bourne, . A Conceptual Framework of Wellbeing in Some Western Nations (A Review Article). Current Research Journal of Social Sciences, (1): Page No: 15-23.
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ISSN (Online): 2041-3246
ISSN (Print): 2041-3238 |
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