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✦   LIBER   ✦

The Relationship Among Wellness, Psychological Distress, and Social Desirability of Entering Master's-Level Counselor Trainees

✍ Scribed by Heather L. Smith; E. H. Mike Robinson III; Mark E. Young


Publisher
American Counseling Association
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
132 KB
Volume
47
Category
Article
ISSN
0011-0035

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Two‐hundred and four entering master's‐level counseling students from 9 programs in 5 states participated in a study testing the only counseling‐based wellness assessment measure, the Five Factor Wellness Evaluation of Lifestyle (J. E. Myers, R. M. Luecht, & T. J. Sweeney, 2004), for its relationship to 2 other constructs: psychological distress and social desirability. There was a statistically significant negative relationship between level of wellness and psychological distress; the relationship between level of wellness and social desirability was found to have no statistical significance; and there was a statistically significant negative relationship between level of social desirability and psychological distress. Implications for counselor education and clinical significance are included.