Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Psychological Response to Harm

Personality Prior to Disability Determines Adaptation


Agreeable Individuals Recover Lost Life Satisfaction Faster and More Completely

  1. Christopher J. Boyce
  2. Alex M. Wood

+Author Affiliations

  1. University of Manchester
  1. Christopher J. Boyce, School of Psychological Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester M13 9PL, United Kingdom E-mail: christopher.boyce@manchester.ac.uk

Abstract

Personality traits prior to the onset of illness or disability may influence how well an individual psychologically adjusts after the illness or disability has occurred. Previous research has shown that after the onset of a disability, people initially experience sharp drops in life satisfaction, and the ability to regain lost life satisfaction is at best partial. However, such research has not investigated the role of individual differences in adaptation to disability. We suggest that predisability personality determines the speed and extent of adaptation. We analyzed measures of personality traits in a sample of 11,680 individuals, 307 of whom became disabled over a 4-year period. We show that although becoming disabled has a severe impact on life satisfaction, this effect is significantly moderated by predisability personality. After 4 years of disability, moderately agreeable individuals had levels of life satisfaction 0.32 standard deviations higher than those of moderately disagreeable individuals. Agreeable individuals adapt more quickly and fully to disability; disagreeable individuals may need additional support to adapt.


http://pss.sagepub.com/content/early/2011/10/19/0956797611421790.abstract

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