The mediating effect of perceived stress on the relationship between big five personality traits and suboptimal health status in Chinese population: A nationwide survey in the framework of predictive, preventive, and personalized medicine

Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Title

EPMA Journal

Volume

15

First Page

25

Last Page

38

Publisher

Springer

School

School of Medical and Health Sciences

RAS ID

64727

Funders

Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province

Comments

Guan, Q., Dong, H., Zhang, Z., Guo, Z., Lin, Z., Niu, H., . . . Hou, H. (2023). The mediating effect of perceived stress on the relationship between big five personality traits and suboptimal health status in Chinese population: A nationwide survey in the framework of predictive, preventive, and personalized medicine. EPMA Journal, 15, 25-38. https://doi.org/10.1007/s13167-023-00349-x

Abstract

Background: The effects of psychological factors on suboptimal health status (SHS) have been widely described; however, mechanisms behind the complex relationships among the Big Five personality traits and SHS are unclear. Identifying people with specific traits who are susceptible to SHS will help improve life quality and reduce the chronic disease burden under the framework of predictive, preventive, and personalized medicine (PPPM / 3PM). This study investigated the relationships among personality traits and SHS. It also explored whether perceived stress plays a mediating role in SHS development. Method: A nationwide cross-sectional survey based on multistage random sampling was conducted in 148 cities in China between June 20 and August 31, 2022. Personality traits, perceived stress, and SHS were evaluated using the Big Five Inventory-10 (BFI-10), the 4-item Perceived Stress Scale (PSS-4), and the Short-Form Suboptimal Health Status Questionnaire (SHSQ-SF), respectively. Pearson’s correlation analysis was employed to examine the associations between personality traits, perceived stress, and SHS. Structural equation modeling (SEM) was used to discern the mediating role of perceived stress in the relationships among personality traits and SHS. Result: A total of 22,897 participants were enrolled in this study, among whom the prevalence of SHS was 52.9%. SHS was negatively correlated with three trait dimensions (i.e., extraversion, agreeableness, and conscientiousness) but positively correlated with neuroticism. Meanwhile, stress was negatively correlated with extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness, and openness, whereas it was positively correlated with neuroticism. The SEM results showed that, when adjusting for covariates (i.e., gender, age, BMI, educational level, current residence, marital status, and occupational status), higher agreeableness ( = − 0.049, P < 0.001) and conscientiousness ( = − 0.103, P < 0.001) led to lower SHS prevalence, higher neuroticism ( = 0.130, P < 0.001), and openness ( = 0.026, P < 0.001) caused SHS to be more prevalent. Perceived stress played a partial mediating role in the relationships among personality traits and SHS, respectively, contributing 41.3%, 35.9%, and 32.5% to the total effects of agreeableness, conscientiousness, and neuroticism on SHS. Additionally, the mediating impact of stress was significant even though extraversion had no direct effect on SHS. Conclusion: This study revealed a high prevalence of SHS in Chinese residents. Personality traits significantly influenced SHS rates, which perceived stress tended to mediate. From a PPPM perspective, early screening and targeted intervention for people with neuroticism (as well as stress alleviation) might contribute to health enhancement and chronic disease prevention.

DOI

10.1007/s13167-023-00349-x

Access Rights

subscription content

Share

 
COinS