Publication | Closed Access
12-Year Associations of Health with Personality in the Second Half of Life
15
Citations
56
References
2017
Year
Quality Of LifeInterdisciplinary Longitudinal StudyObjective Health12-Year AssociationsHealth PsychologyMental HealthSocial SciencesPsychologyDevelopmental PsychologySecond HalfMidlife HealthPersonality DevelopmentWhereas Baseline ExtraversionPsychiatryPsychosocial FactorPersonality PsychologyHealth BehaviorMedicinePersonality Science
Abstract. We examined longitudinal associations between personality, objective (physician-rated) and self-rated health over 12 years in two German cohorts (midlife cohort, born 1950/52, n T0 = 502; late-life cohort, born 1930/32, n T0 = 500) from the Interdisciplinary Longitudinal Study of Adult Development (ILSE). Based on cross-lagged panel design analyses controlling for sex, education, depression, and cognitive abilities, we found that after 12 years better baseline objective health predicted lower Neuroticism and higher Agreeableness, whereas baseline Extraversion and Conscientiousness were positive predictors of later self-rated health. Our findings thus illustrate that the direction of longitudinal personality-health associations is dependent on whether objective or self-rated health is considered, whereas relations do not seem to be considerably different in midlife vs. in old age.
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