Authors
Lauren L Mitchell, Rachel Zmora, Jessica M Finlay, Eric Jutkowitz, Joseph E Gaugler
Publication date
2021/1/1
Journal
The Journals of Gerontology: Series B
Volume
76
Issue
1
Pages
44-55
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Objectives
Theory suggests that individuals with higher neuroticism have more severe negative reactions to stress, though empirical work examining the interaction between neuroticism and stressors has yielded mixed results. The present study investigated whether neuroticism and other Big Five traits moderated the effects of recent stressful life events on older adults’ health outcomes.
Method
Data were drawn from the subset of Health and Retirement Study participants who completed a Big Five personality measure (N = 14,418). We used latent growth curve models to estimate trajectories of change in depressive symptoms, self-rated physical health, and C-reactive protein levels over the course of 10 years (up to six waves). We included Big Five traits and stressful life events as covariates to test their effects on each of these three health outcomes. We examined stressful life …
Total citations
2021202220232024411133