Personality traits and dimensions of mental health
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Date
Authors
Kang, Weixi
Steffens, Francois E.
Pineda, Sonia
Widuch, Kaya
Malvaso, Antonio
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Nature Reseach
Abstract
Individuals are different in a relatively constant pattern of thoughts, feeling, and behaviors, which are
called personality traits. Mental health is a condition of well-being in which people may reach their
full potential and deal effectively with stress, work efficiently, and contribute to their communities.
Indeed, the link between personality and mental health as indicated by the 12-item version of the
general health questionnaires (GHQ-12) has been well-established according to evidence found
by decades of research. However, the GHQ-12 comprises many questions asking about different
dimensions of mental health. It is unclear how personality traits relate to these dimensions of mental
health. In this paper, we try to address this question. We analyzed data from 12,007 participants from
the British Household Panel Study (BHPS) using a confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) and generalized
linear models. We replicated the factor structure of GHQ-12 labeled as GHQ-12A (social dysfunction
& anhedonia; 6 items), GHQ-12B (depression & anxiety; 4 items), and GHQ-12C (loss of confidence;
2 items). Moreover, Neuroticism was positively related to all dimensions of mental health issues,
Extraversion was negatively related to GHQ-12A (social dysfunction & anhedonia) and GHQ-12B
(depression & anxiety), Agreeableness and Conscientiousness were negatively related to GHQ-12A
(social dysfunction & anhedonia) and GHQ-12C (loss of confidence), and Openness was negatively
related to GHQ-12B (depression & anxiety). These results contribute to theories including the
predisposition/vulnerability model, complication/scar model, pathoplasty/exacerbation model, and
the spectrum model, which propose that personality traits are linked to mental health and explained
possible reasons. Psychologists may use results from this study to identify individuals who may be at
high risk of developing various non-psychiatric mental health issues and intervene to avoid negative
outcomes.
Description
DATA AVAILABILITY : The study materials and data can be accessed at https://www.iser.essex.ac.uk/bhps/documentation/volb/wave15.
Keywords
Psychologists, High risk, Neuroticism, Mental health
Sustainable Development Goals
None
Citation
Kang, W., Steffens, F., Pineda, S. et al. Personality traits and dimensions of mental health. Scientific Reports 13, 7091 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-33996-1.