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Predicting Perceived Health of Older Adults: The Role of Health, Personality, and Resilience

Past research has not addressed how domain-specific “health” personality traits are associated with resilience and well-being. The purpose of this study was to determine pathways from health personality to perceived health, mediated by resilience. Data included 3,907 participants, 65 and older, coll...

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Autores principales: Arieli, Rotem, Kim, Joseph, Martin, Peter
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7740930/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igaa057.734
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author Arieli, Rotem
Kim, Joseph
Martin, Peter
author_facet Arieli, Rotem
Kim, Joseph
Martin, Peter
author_sort Arieli, Rotem
collection PubMed
description Past research has not addressed how domain-specific “health” personality traits are associated with resilience and well-being. The purpose of this study was to determine pathways from health personality to perceived health, mediated by resilience. Data included 3,907 participants, 65 and older, collected by a large provider of Medicare Supplemental Health Insurance. The Health Personality Assessment (health neuroticism, health extraversion, health openness, health agreeableness, and health conscientiousness), Brief Resilience Scale, and perceived health were measured. Structural equation modeling and bootstrap mediation were conducted in Mplus. The hypothesized model resulted in a marginal fit, so direct paths from health openness and health conscientiousness to perceived health were added, resulting in an improved fit, χ2(192)=1660.96, RMSEA=.04, CFI=.95; χ2∆(2)=403.99, p<.001. Health neuroticism and health extraversion negatively predicted perceived health, fully mediated by resilience, β=-.11, p<.001, and β=-.01, p<.05, suggesting that people anxious about their health or that talk about their health had significantly lower levels of resilience. Resilience positively predicted perceived health, indicating that more resilient people reported better health. Higher levels of health openness predicted significantly lower levels of perceived health, β=-.19, p<.001. Greater levels of health conscientiousness predicted better perceived health, β=.20, p<.001, and resilience in-turn positively related to perceived health, β=.08, p<.001. Health personality and resilience explained 25.3% of variance in perceived health. This study exemplifies the importance of health personality and resilience in predicting perceived health for older adults. Future research should examine interventions focused on health personality increasing resilience, as older adults with higher resilience reported significantly better health.
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spelling pubmed-77409302020-12-21 Predicting Perceived Health of Older Adults: The Role of Health, Personality, and Resilience Arieli, Rotem Kim, Joseph Martin, Peter Innov Aging Abstracts Past research has not addressed how domain-specific “health” personality traits are associated with resilience and well-being. The purpose of this study was to determine pathways from health personality to perceived health, mediated by resilience. Data included 3,907 participants, 65 and older, collected by a large provider of Medicare Supplemental Health Insurance. The Health Personality Assessment (health neuroticism, health extraversion, health openness, health agreeableness, and health conscientiousness), Brief Resilience Scale, and perceived health were measured. Structural equation modeling and bootstrap mediation were conducted in Mplus. The hypothesized model resulted in a marginal fit, so direct paths from health openness and health conscientiousness to perceived health were added, resulting in an improved fit, χ2(192)=1660.96, RMSEA=.04, CFI=.95; χ2∆(2)=403.99, p<.001. Health neuroticism and health extraversion negatively predicted perceived health, fully mediated by resilience, β=-.11, p<.001, and β=-.01, p<.05, suggesting that people anxious about their health or that talk about their health had significantly lower levels of resilience. Resilience positively predicted perceived health, indicating that more resilient people reported better health. Higher levels of health openness predicted significantly lower levels of perceived health, β=-.19, p<.001. Greater levels of health conscientiousness predicted better perceived health, β=.20, p<.001, and resilience in-turn positively related to perceived health, β=.08, p<.001. Health personality and resilience explained 25.3% of variance in perceived health. This study exemplifies the importance of health personality and resilience in predicting perceived health for older adults. Future research should examine interventions focused on health personality increasing resilience, as older adults with higher resilience reported significantly better health. Oxford University Press 2020-12-16 /pmc/articles/PMC7740930/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igaa057.734 Text en © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Arieli, Rotem
Kim, Joseph
Martin, Peter
Predicting Perceived Health of Older Adults: The Role of Health, Personality, and Resilience
title Predicting Perceived Health of Older Adults: The Role of Health, Personality, and Resilience
title_full Predicting Perceived Health of Older Adults: The Role of Health, Personality, and Resilience
title_fullStr Predicting Perceived Health of Older Adults: The Role of Health, Personality, and Resilience
title_full_unstemmed Predicting Perceived Health of Older Adults: The Role of Health, Personality, and Resilience
title_short Predicting Perceived Health of Older Adults: The Role of Health, Personality, and Resilience
title_sort predicting perceived health of older adults: the role of health, personality, and resilience
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7740930/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igaa057.734
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