| Literature DB >> 33073161 |
Sara J Weston1, Eileen K Graham2, Nicholas A Turiano3, Damaris Aschwanden4, Tom Booth5, Fleur Harrison6, Bryan D James7, Nathan A Lewis8, Steven R Makkar6, Swantje Mueller9,10, Kristi M Wisniewski11, Tomiko Yoneda8, Ruixue Zhaoyang12, Avron Spiro13,14, Johanna Drewelies10, Gert G Wagner10, Elisabeth Steinhagen-Thiessen15, Ilja Demuth16, Sherry Willis17, K Warner Schaie18, Martin Sliwinski12, Richard A Lipton19, Mindy Katz19, Ian J Deary5, Elizabeth M Zelinski11, David A Bennett7, Perminder S Sachdev6, Henry Brodaty6, Julian N Trollor6,20, David Ames21, Margaret J Wright22, Denis Gerstorf10, Mathias Allemand23, Graciela Muniz-Terrera24, Andrea M Piccinin8, Scott M Hofer8, Daniel K Mroczek2,25.
Abstract
Early investigations of the neuroticism by conscientiousness interaction with regards to health have been promising, but to date, there have been no systematic investigations of this interaction that account for the various personality measurement instruments, varying populations, or aspects of health. The current study - the second of three - uses a coordinated analysis approach to test the impact of the neuroticism by conscientiousness interaction on the prevalence and incidence of chronic conditions. Using 15 pre-existing longitudinal studies (N > 49,375), we found that conscientiousness did not moderate the relationship between neuroticism and having hypertension (OR = 1.00,95%CI[0.98,1.02]), diabetes (OR = 1.02[0.99,1.04]), or heart disease (OR = 0.99[0.97,1.01]). Similarly, we found that conscientiousness did not moderate the prospective relationship between neuroticism and onset of hypertension (OR = 0.98,[0.95,1.01]), diabetes (OR = 0.99[0.94,1.05]), or heart disease (OR = 0.98[0.94,1.03]). Heterogeneity of effect sizes was largely nonsignificant, with one exception, indicating that the effects are consistent between datasets. Overall, we conclude that there is no evidence that healthy neuroticism, operationalized as the conscientiousness by neuroticism interaction, buffers against chronic conditions.Entities:
Keywords: chronic condition; conscientiousness; coordinated analysis; health; healthy neuroticism; longitudinal
Year: 2020 PMID: 33073161 PMCID: PMC7566654 DOI: 10.1525/collabra.267
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Collabra Psychol ISSN: 2474-7394