2010
DOI: 10.1007/s11482-009-9091-9
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Vacationers Happier, but Most not Happier After a Holiday

Abstract: The aim of this study was to obtain a greater insight into the association between vacations and happiness. We examined whether vacationers differ in happiness, compared to those not going on holiday, and if a holiday trip boosts post-trip happiness. These questions were addressed in a pre-test/post-test design study among 1,530 Dutch individuals. 974 vacationers answered questions about their happiness before and after a holiday trip. Vacationers reported a higher degree of pre-trip happiness, compared to non… Show more

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Cited by 196 publications
(129 citation statements)
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References 51 publications
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“…The results, Z=-3,510, p=0,000 (positive physical effects) and Z=-4,222, p=0,000 (positive psychological effects) mean that there is statistically significant difference between the two subsamples (S1w,S2w) in terms of the length of positive physical and psychological effects of a vacation. In spite of the statistical difference between the two subsamples, the mean fade-out values support earlier literature on fade-out of positive vacation effects (Nawijn, Miquelle, Marchand, Veenhoven, & Vingerhoets, 2010, Kühnel & Sonnentag, 2011, De Bloom, Radstaak, & Geurts, 2013 and raise serious doubts about how much traditional tourism products in general and especially in Hungary can actually contribute to improving physical and psychological health of the population. Although happiness (subjective wellbeing) is positively correlated with good health (Veenhoven, 2007, Boehm & Kubzansky, 2012, Sabatini, 2014, because of the very short fade-out period tourism's effect is very limited, if any at al.…”
Section: Fade-out Period Of Positive Physical and Psychological Effectssupporting
confidence: 78%
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“…The results, Z=-3,510, p=0,000 (positive physical effects) and Z=-4,222, p=0,000 (positive psychological effects) mean that there is statistically significant difference between the two subsamples (S1w,S2w) in terms of the length of positive physical and psychological effects of a vacation. In spite of the statistical difference between the two subsamples, the mean fade-out values support earlier literature on fade-out of positive vacation effects (Nawijn, Miquelle, Marchand, Veenhoven, & Vingerhoets, 2010, Kühnel & Sonnentag, 2011, De Bloom, Radstaak, & Geurts, 2013 and raise serious doubts about how much traditional tourism products in general and especially in Hungary can actually contribute to improving physical and psychological health of the population. Although happiness (subjective wellbeing) is positively correlated with good health (Veenhoven, 2007, Boehm & Kubzansky, 2012, Sabatini, 2014, because of the very short fade-out period tourism's effect is very limited, if any at al.…”
Section: Fade-out Period Of Positive Physical and Psychological Effectssupporting
confidence: 78%
“…Even if a small positive correlation has been confirmed, vacations do not have a lasting effect on wellbeing. The fade-out period can be a few days (De Bloom, Radstaak, & Geurts, 2014) and 2-4 weeks in other studies (Nawijn, Miquelle, Marchand, Veenhoven, & Vingerhoets, 2010, Kühnel & Sonnentag, 2011. The present paper gives new empirical evidence of the fast fade-out of both positive physical and psychological effects of holidays.…”
Section: Tourism and Wellbeingsupporting
confidence: 52%
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“…The baseline measure of H&W (Pre) was scheduled 2 weeks prior to vacation, because measurements immediately before vacation may be biased either looking forward to vacation (Gilbert and Abdullah 2002;Nawijn et al 2010) and/or pre-vacation work stress (DeFrank et al 2000;Westman 2005).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent research has mostly supported the direct way in which vacationing adds to individuals' happiness (Boelhouwer & Stoop, 1999;De Bloom et al, 2010;Hagger, 2009;Nawijn, 2010;Nawijn, 2011b;Nawijn, Marchand, Veenhoven, & Vingerhoets, 2010). For instance, people who had recently had a holiday trip score higher on overall happiness than those who did not (Boelhouwer & Stoop, 1999), which supports the afterglow hypothesis.…”
Section: Leisure Travelmentioning
confidence: 90%