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Quality of life

Cancer, 1987
The term quality of life (QL) is a global characterization usually consisting of the following factors: physical function, symptoms from disease and/or treatment, occupational and social interactions, and psychological parameters, including mood with some overall assessment of well-being, such as happiness or satisfaction.
C R, Smart, J W, Yates
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Quality of Life

2011
A judgment about quality of life means an evaluation of major aspects, or of the entirety, of a life situation, a life path, or a society. The sister concept of well-being likewise involves an evaluation of a person’s or group’s situation and can focus on any of many valued aspects of (a) life, or some set thereof, or their totality.
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Work and the Quality of Life

International Journal of Psychology, 1985
Wilensky's (1960, 1961) proposition that the integration of work into one's total life is contingent upon the technological and social organization of the work was tested in a national probability sample of approximately 1,025 men and women. In line with Wilensky's arguments, it was found that a composit measure of job complexity and occupational ...
A P, Brief, J R, Hollenbeck
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Quality of Life in Hypoparathyroidism

Endocrinology and Metabolism Clinics of North America, 2018
Patients with hypoparathyroidism have a multitude of physical, emotional, and cognitive complaints consistent with reduced quality of life (QOL). Impaired QOL in patients treated with conventional therapy with calcium and active vitamin D has been documented in epidemiologic (registry) studies, case-controlled studies, and surveys, and at baseline in ...
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The Quality of Life: What Quality? Whose Life?

Interdisciplinary Science Reviews, 1992
As a consequence of industrialization, we face unprecedented pressures on the carrying capacity of the earth. Desertification, pollution and global climate changes can only increase these pressures, and will cause vast increases in the number of refugees and widespread risks to human health.
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Sanctity of Life or Quality of Life?

Pediatrics, 1983
The ethical outlook that holds human life to be sacrosanct—I shall call it the "sanctity-of-life view"—is under attack. The first major blow to the sanctity of life view was the spreading acceptance of abortion throughout the Western world. Supporters of the sanctity-of-life view have pointed out that some premature babies are less developed than some ...
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