Examining the prevalence of type-D personality in an Australian population


Autoria(s): Horwood, Sharon; Chamravi, Daniel; Tooley, Greg
Data(s)

01/01/2015

Resumo

© 2015 The Australian Psychological Society. Objective: Type-D personality is a construct that describes a tendency to simultaneously experience negative emotions and inhibit self-expression for fear of negative social judgement. The link between type-D and poor health outcomes may be partly mediated by two prominent psychosocial mechanisms, poor-quality health-related behaviour and poor perceived-social support. Method: The present study replicated and extended a 2008 UK and Irish prevalence study, utilising a sample from the Australian general population. The study aimed to investigate the relationship between type-D personality and subjective levels of social support, health-related behaviours and neuroticism, as well as examining the estimated prevalence rate of type-D in the general Australian population. Nine hundred and fifty five Australian participants over the age of 18 (194 male and 761 female) completed four measures assessing levels of type-D personality, quality of health-related behaviours, perceived-social support and neuroticism. Results: As hypothesised, the estimated prevalence rate was not found to be significantly different from the rate obtained by Williams etal. (2008). In addition, type-D individuals reported significantly lower perceived-social support and poorer-quality health behaviours than non-type-D individuals. Conclusions: The results of this study provide further support for the association of type-D personality with poor health-related behaviours and poor perceived-social support, as well as demonstrating the applicability of the type-D construct to the Australian general population for the first time. General healthcare applications are discussed, as well as the potential for type-D personality research to influence public illness prevention in general.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30075016

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Australian Psychological Society

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30075016/horwood-examiningtheprevalence-2015.pdf

Palavras-Chave #Social Sciences #Psychology, Multidisciplinary #Psychology #chronic illness #health behaviour #health outcomes #personality #social support #type-D personality #CORONARY HEART-DISEASE #MYOCARDIAL-INFARCTION #LIFE EVENTS #HEALTH #DS14 #MORTALITY #ADULTS
Tipo

Journal Article