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- Personality traits are robust predictors of health over the life span and behavioral choices connect personality to health. Personality characteristics predict whether individuals will engage in health-promoting or health-detrimental behaviors.
academic.oup.com/edited-volume/34662/chapter/295346462Associations Between Personality and Health Behaviors Across ...
Studies that examine associations between the Big Five personality traits and physical health have focused extensively on conscientiousness. People who are conscientious (characterized by being goal oriented, well organized, and responsible) live longer, healthier lives.
- Personality and Longevity: Knowns, Unknowns, and Implications ...
Personality phenotype is thought to influence longevity...
- Personality and health: Road to well-being - PMC
Clinical model has elaborated the relationship of...
- Personality and Longevity: Knowns, Unknowns, and Implications ...
- Type A
- More Laid Back
- People-Pleasers
- Worrywarts
- Distressed
- Introverts
- What It All Means
- A Word from Verywell
The classic type A personalityis often characterized as hard-driving, controlling, and perfectionistic. People who exhibit characteristics of this personality type tend to be more competitive, impatient, tense, assertive, and even aggressive. Type A's are often seen as hard-driving workaholics who will do anything to get ahead. They often feel a ne...
People with a laid-back personality, often referred to as a Type B personality, tend to be much more relaxed and easy-going than their Type A counterparts. In contrast to Type As, Type Bs are typically less stressed and less competitive. These individuals are apt to be more focused on performing tasks for the enjoyment of doing so rather than being...
People with an "eager to please" personality type tend to be accommodating, passive, and conforming. This personality type can have its health upsides and downsides. On one hand, they're eager to please nature means that they are more likely to follow their doctor's orders. They may also be less likely to seek help when something is wrong, instead ...
If you tend to have a neurotic personality, you may respond to feelings of loss, frustration, and other stresses with negative emotions. Experiencing intense emotional reactions to relatively minor life challenges is common. Researchers have found that this trait can be a predictor of a variety of physical and mental disorders, including overall li...
The type D personalitywas first introduced in 1996 and is characterized by "distressed" traits such as being more prone to negative emotions and a lack of self-expression. Stress, depression, anxiety, anger, and loneliness are also associated with the Type D personality. It can also come with serious health consequences. So what are the possible he...
One study found that people who tend to be more extroverted, conscientious, and agreeable also tend to be healthier. This is due, in part, to the fact that people who exhibit higher levels of these traits also tend to be more likely to communicate more effectively with their doctors. A 2009 study found that social support was linked to physical h...
While research indicates that personality type clearly plays a role in health and well-being, certain ailments are more likely to be influenced by psychological characteristics. Heart disease, for example, is more strongly linked to personality type than cancer. So why does personality have an impact on health? Why are certain traits so tied to cer...
Research clearly shows a connection between personality and health. If you believe that your personality, mental state, or behaviors are causing illness or worsening your current symptoms, talk to your doctor for advice on possible treatments which may involve psychotherapy, medication, or self-care.
Three mechanisms to account for personality influences on health have received particular attention: health behaviors, social relationships, and stress. Personality traits may influence whether a person engages in health-enhancing or health-damaging behaviors, has a supportive social environment, is exposed to stress and can manage stress.
Personality phenotype is thought to influence longevity through physiological and behavioral pathways leading to health decline. This occurs in the context of environmental (physical or social) and individual genetic influences, which may enter into risk chains directly or modify them indirectly.
Personality may influence health through a person’s behavior; traits like hostility could influence health more directly by increasing stress, or a person’s physiology might influence both their temperament and their risk of disease.
- Ian Mcdowell
Clinical model has elaborated the relationship of personality with psychopathology, however, mental health aspects and its relationship were not enumerated with equal emphasis and less is discussed about personality to health as a state of physical, mental, and social well-being.
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Jan 1, 2016 · Outline. Add to Mendeley. Share. Cite. https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-411469-2.00011-X Get rights and content. For decades, researchers have noted the importance of understanding how individual differences influence health and well-being.