2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.jesp.2018.02.014
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Happy to help? A systematic review and meta-analysis of the effects of performing acts of kindness on the well-being of the actor

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Cited by 345 publications
(312 citation statements)
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References 76 publications
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“…Results from the alternative model suggest that prosocial bystander behavior positively relates to virtues and happiness in adolescence. This evidence is consistent with past literature that reports a positive impact of prosocial behavior in virtues development (Lerner et al, 2003;Dunn et al, 2014;Aknin et al, 2015;Carlo et al, 2015;Fu et al, 2017;Al-yaaribi et al, 2018;Curry et al, 2018;Bieda et al, 2019). Although the mechanism underlying this relationship remains unclear, the current body of the literature suggests that the effect of happiness in prosocial behavior is related to adolescents' perceptions about positive consequences of their behavior in their own and others' wellbeing (Bierhoff, 2002;Rudd et al, 2014;Paulus and Moore, 2016).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Results from the alternative model suggest that prosocial bystander behavior positively relates to virtues and happiness in adolescence. This evidence is consistent with past literature that reports a positive impact of prosocial behavior in virtues development (Lerner et al, 2003;Dunn et al, 2014;Aknin et al, 2015;Carlo et al, 2015;Fu et al, 2017;Al-yaaribi et al, 2018;Curry et al, 2018;Bieda et al, 2019). Although the mechanism underlying this relationship remains unclear, the current body of the literature suggests that the effect of happiness in prosocial behavior is related to adolescents' perceptions about positive consequences of their behavior in their own and others' wellbeing (Bierhoff, 2002;Rudd et al, 2014;Paulus and Moore, 2016).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Curricula to educate premedical, medical, and other healthcare professional students should include efforts to foster compassionate behavior, because such behavior likely causes healthcare providers as well as their patients to be happier [1,2]. Humanistic values are believed to "animate" compassionate professional behavior [3], and these values include accountability, altruism, duty, excellence, honor, integrity, and respect for others [4].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Finally, we analyze the frequency of personal preferences that people exhibited across all of our studies and found that, when studies included the binary choice of either compensating or punishing, participants consistently preferred compensation over punishment. This is interesting because although compensating is psychologically rewarding (Curry et al 2018), neurobiological research suggests that people find punishing more rewarding than compensating (Stallen et al, 2018). When the additional options of choosing a mixed response (partly punish, partly compensate) or choosing non-intervention were provided, participant showed the strongest preference for not intervening in the situation, followed by a preference for mixed response.…”
Section: Part 7: Frequency Of Preferences Across Studymentioning
confidence: 99%