| Literature DB >> 31506914 |
Marcin Rzeszutek1, Ewa Gruszczyńska2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: We examined whether three types of personality (i.e. resilient, undercontrolled and overcontrolled) based on the Big Five personality taxonomy could be replicated among people living with HIV (PLWH). We also aimed to establish significant sociodemographic and clinical covariates of profile membership and verify whether these profiles are related to the subjective well-being (SWB) of participants.Entities:
Keywords: HIV/AIDS; Personality types; Typological approach
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31506914 PMCID: PMC6962120 DOI: 10.1007/s11136-019-02288-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Qual Life Res ISSN: 0962-9343 Impact factor: 4.147
Sociodemographic and clinical variables in the studied sample (N = 770)
| Variable | |
|---|---|
| Gender | |
| Male | 599 (77.8%) |
| Female | 171 (22.2%) |
| Age in years ( | 38.58 ± 10.31 |
| Marital status | |
| In relationship | 440 (57.1%) |
| Single | 330 (42.9%) |
| Education | |
| Elementary | 33 (4.3%) |
| Basic vocational | 79 (10.3%) |
| Secondary | 270 (35.1%) |
| University degree | 388 (50.4%) |
| Employment | |
| Full employment | 548 (71.2%) |
| Unemployment | 101 (13.1%) |
| Retirement | 24 (3.1%) |
| Sickness Allowance | 97 (12.5%) |
| Financial status (from 1 = very low to 5 = very high) | 2.50 ± 0.94 |
| Sexual orientation | |
| Heterosexual | 282 (36.6%) |
| Homosexual | 413 (53.6%) |
| Bisexual | 75 (9.7%) |
| Place of infection | |
| Home country | 694 (90.1%) |
| Abroad | 76 (9.9%) |
| Mode of infection | |
| Sex with men | 525 (68.2%) |
| Sex with women | 85 (11.0%) |
| Drugs | 97 (12.6%) |
| Medical procedures | 8 (1.0%) |
| Others | 54 (7.0%) |
| HIV/AIDS status | |
| HIV+ only | 629 (81.7%) |
| HIV/AIDS | 140 (18.2%) |
| HIV infection duration in years ( | 8.07 ± 7.57 |
| Antiretroviral treatment duration in years ( | 6.27 ± 5.86 |
| CD4 count ( | 504.63 ± 238.65 |
| Viremia | |
| Detectable | 193 (25.1%) |
| Undetectable | 518 (67.3%) |
| Don’t know | 58 (7.5%) |
| Addiction | |
| Yes | 117 (15.2%) |
| No | 653 (84.8%) |
M mean, SD standard deviation
Descriptive statistics and one-sample t test for comparison with population means on big five dimensions
| Variables | Sample | Population | Cohen’s | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M | SD | Min–max | Skewness | Kurtosis | SD | |||||
| Personality | ||||||||||
| N | 22.44 | 8.78 | 0–46 | − .10 | − .42 | 22.79 | 7.87 | − 1.10 | ns | 0.04 |
| E | 23.47 | 5.73 | 8–39 | − .14 | − .02 | 27.79 | 6.86 | − 20.93 | < .001 | 0.75 |
| O | 25.34 | 5.92 | 10–41 | .27 | − .40 | 27.80 | 6.31 | − 11.54 | < .001 | 0.42 |
| A | 27.93 | 6.47 | 8–44 | − .03 | − .45 | 28.68 | 5.76 | − 3.24 | .001 | 0.12 |
| C | 26.52 | 4.99 | 0–41 | − .39 | 2.26 | 29.40 | 7.25 | − 16.02 | < .001 | 0.58 |
| Subjective wellbeing | ||||||||||
| SWL | 19.13 | 6.43 | 5–35 | − .02 | − .64 | |||||
| PA | 3.32 | 0.72 | 1.2–5 | − .18 | − .34 | |||||
| NA | 2.23 | 0.90 | 1–5 | .67 | − .24 | |||||
N neuroticism, E extraversion, O openness to experience, A agreeableness, C conscientiousness, SWL satisfaction with life, PA positive affect, NA negative affect
Summary of model selection indices of latent profile analysis
| Model | BIC | AIC | SABIC | No of parameters | Entropy | LMR | VLMR | Smallest class | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Value | Value | % of | frequency | ||||||||
| Sample-based standarisation | |||||||||||
| 1-Class | 10,992 | 10,946 | 10,961 | 10 | |||||||
| 2-Class | 10,725 | 10,650 | 10,674 | 16 | .61 | 300.53 | .05 | 81.82 | .05 | 47.99 | 370 |
| 3-Class | 10,555 | 10,453 | 10,485 | 22 | .67 | 204.30 | < .001 | − 51.73 | < .001 | 18.57 | 143 |
| 4-Class | 10,318 | 10,318 | 10,359 | 28 | .76 | 143.70 | < .001 | 2.04 | < .001 | 6.10 | 47 |
| 5-Class | 10,417 | 10,259 | 10,309 | 34 | .75 | 68.67 | ns | 77.166 | ns | 7.01 | 55 |
| Population-based standarisation | |||||||||||
| 1-Class | 10,382 | 10,335 | 10,350 | 10 | |||||||
| 2-Class | 10,110 | 10,036 | 10,059 | 16 | .61 | 303.88 | .04 | 76.25 | .04 | 49.61 | 382 |
| 3-Class | 9946 | 9843 | 9876 | 22 | .66 | 199.51 | < .001 | − 41.74 | < .001 | 18.57 | 143 |
| 4-Class | 9829 | 9699 | 9740 | 28 | .76 | 153.11 | .002 | 7.01 | .001 | 6.10 | 47 |
| 5-Class | 9799 | 9641 | 9691 | 34 | .75 | 68.18 | ns | 111.14 | ns | 6.36 | 49 |
BIC Bayesian information criterion, AIC Akaike’s information criterion, SABIC sample-size adjusted BIC, LMR Lo–Mendell–Rubin likelihood ratio test, VLMR Vuong–Lo–Mendell–Rubin likelihood ratio test
Fig. 1Results of latent profile analysis on the sample-based standardisation: four profiles of Big Five personality dimensions. ES emotional stability (reverse scores of Neuroticism), E extraversion, O openness to experiences, A agreeableness, C conscientiousness. Profile 1—undercontrolled type; profile 2—resilient type; profile 3—average type; profile 4—overcontrolled type
Fig. 2Results of latent profile analysis on the population-based standardisation: four profiles of Big Five personality dimensions. ES emotional stability (reverse scores of Neuroticism), E extraversion, O openness to experiences, A Agreeableness, C conscientiousness
Relationship between profiles and subjective well-being (means)—overall Wald test
| Subjective wellbeing | Profile 1 | Profile 2 | Profile 3 | Profile 4 | Wald | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Undercontrollers | Resilient | Average | Overcontrollers | Value | ||
| Without adjustment for profile membership correlatesa | ||||||
| Satisfaction with life | 17.28 | 23.72 | 15.33 | 18.71 | 203.79 | < .001 |
| Positive affect | 2.89 | 3.77 | 2.96 | 3.35 | 163.10 | < .001 |
| Negative affect | 2.15 | 1.64 | 2.68 | 2.53 | 185.43 | < .001 |
| With adjustment for profile membership correlatesb | ||||||
| Satisfaction with life | 17.29 | 23.79 | 15.42 | 18.69 | 202.21 | < .001 |
| Positive affect | 2.89 | 3.77 | 2.96 | 3.34 | 163.98 | < .001 |
| Negative affect | 2.17 | 1.63 | 2.66 | 2.54 | 182.78 | < .001 |
aAll the pairwise comparisons between profiles significant at least at p < .05. Exceptions are: profile 1 versus profile 3 (Wald = 3.38. df = 1. p = .07) and profile 1 versus profile 4 (Wald = 1.48. df = 1. p = .22) for Satisfaction with life; profile 1 versus profile 3 (Wald = 0.22. df = 1. p = .64). for Positive affect; profile 3 versus profile 4 (Wald = 1.41. df = 1. p = .24) for Negative affect
bAll the pairwise comparisons between profiles significant at least at p < .05. Exceptions are: profile 1 versus profile 3 (Wald = 2.99. df = 1. p = .08) and profile 1 versus profile 4 (Wald = 1.38. df = 1. p = .24) for Satisfaction with life; profile 1 versus profile 3 (Wald = 0.45. df = 1. p = .50) for Positive affect; profile 3 versus profile 4 (Wald = 1.03. df = 1. p = .31) for Negative affect