World beliefs, character strengths, and hope for the future.

Research in recent years has revealed the rate of premature and avoidable deaths from suicide and drug/‌alcohol misuse is rising in the United States. These are sometimes referred to as deaths of despair based on evidence that they are concentrated in relatively poor communities with less access to...

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Main Author: Robert E McGrath
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2023-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0286531&type=printable
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author Robert E McGrath
author_facet Robert E McGrath
author_sort Robert E McGrath
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description Research in recent years has revealed the rate of premature and avoidable deaths from suicide and drug/‌alcohol misuse is rising in the United States. These are sometimes referred to as deaths of despair based on evidence that they are concentrated in relatively poor communities with less access to social resources and low labor force participation. The pattern was first noted in middle-aged White men but seems to be gradually spreading to other ethnic groups. As a first step in establishing a psychological response to this public health issue, the present article summarizes two studies that compared psychological variables to demographics as predictors of hopefulness. A number of intriguing findings emerged. Despite concerns about American despair and conflict, U.S. residents proved the most hopeful among residents of eight countries. Low-income Americans are particularly hopeful except for low-income Whites. Positive character traits and primal beliefs about the world generally proved to be better predictors of hope than ethnicity, financial status, or their interaction. A number of relationships were found between psychological variables and community demographics. The findings as a group suggest hopefulness is driven more by psychological variables than by life circumstances. It is suggested that psychologists could play an important role in the study of this topic by implementing programs intended to enhance hopefulness in impoverished populations, and by encouraging an intentional communal focus on the importance of enhancing well-being.
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spelling doaj.art-35a4dbfa784149d28a771329302ef2cb2023-12-12T05:35:33ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032023-01-01186e028653110.1371/journal.pone.0286531World beliefs, character strengths, and hope for the future.Robert E McGrathResearch in recent years has revealed the rate of premature and avoidable deaths from suicide and drug/‌alcohol misuse is rising in the United States. These are sometimes referred to as deaths of despair based on evidence that they are concentrated in relatively poor communities with less access to social resources and low labor force participation. The pattern was first noted in middle-aged White men but seems to be gradually spreading to other ethnic groups. As a first step in establishing a psychological response to this public health issue, the present article summarizes two studies that compared psychological variables to demographics as predictors of hopefulness. A number of intriguing findings emerged. Despite concerns about American despair and conflict, U.S. residents proved the most hopeful among residents of eight countries. Low-income Americans are particularly hopeful except for low-income Whites. Positive character traits and primal beliefs about the world generally proved to be better predictors of hope than ethnicity, financial status, or their interaction. A number of relationships were found between psychological variables and community demographics. The findings as a group suggest hopefulness is driven more by psychological variables than by life circumstances. It is suggested that psychologists could play an important role in the study of this topic by implementing programs intended to enhance hopefulness in impoverished populations, and by encouraging an intentional communal focus on the importance of enhancing well-being.https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0286531&type=printable
spellingShingle Robert E McGrath
World beliefs, character strengths, and hope for the future.
PLoS ONE
title World beliefs, character strengths, and hope for the future.
title_full World beliefs, character strengths, and hope for the future.
title_fullStr World beliefs, character strengths, and hope for the future.
title_full_unstemmed World beliefs, character strengths, and hope for the future.
title_short World beliefs, character strengths, and hope for the future.
title_sort world beliefs character strengths and hope for the future
url https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/file?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0286531&type=printable
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