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Personality affects aspects of health-related quality of life in Parkinson's disease via psychological coping strategies

Version 2 2025-03-19, 00:01
Version 1 2023-05-17, 21:18
journal contribution
posted on 2025-03-19, 00:01 authored by SR Whitworth, AM Loftus, TC Skinner, N Gasson, RA Barker, RS Bucks, MG Thomas
<p>Background: Personality traits influence health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in Parkinson's disease (PD). Further, an individual's personality traits can influence the strategies they use to cope with a particular stressful situation. However, in PD, the interplay between personality traits, choice of coping strategy, and their subsequent effect on HRQoL remains unclear.</p> <p>Objective: The objective of this study was to examine whether personality (neuroticism and extraversion) indirectly affects HRQoL through the use of specific psychological coping strategies.</p> <p>Methods: One hundred and forty-six patients with PD completed questionnaires on personality (Big Five Aspects Scale; BFAS), coping (Ways of Coping Questionnaire; WCQ), and mood-specific (Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale; DASS-21) and disease-specific HRQoL (Parkinson's Disease Questionnaire; PDQ-39).</p> <p>Results: After controlling for gender, age at diagnosis, and age at testing, the emotion-focused coping strategy of escape-avoidance was significantly correlated with neuroticism and certain aspects of HRQoL (cognitive impairment and social support). This suggests that neurotic personality traits may negatively impact on some aspects of HRQoL due to an increased use of escape-avoidance coping strategies. By contrast, planned problem-solving and escape-avoidance coping strategies were both significantly linked to extraversion and interpersonal and mood-related domains of HRQoL. This suggests that extraversion may positively impact on some aspects of HRQoL due to patients adopting greater planned, problem-solving coping strategies, and using fewer escape-avoidance coping mechanisms.</p> <p>Conclusions: Psychological interventions aimed at targeting maladaptive coping strategies, such as the use of escape-avoidance coping, may be effective in minimising the negative impact of neuroticism on HRQoL in PD.</p>

History

Publication title

Journal of Parkinson's Disease

Volume

3

Issue

1

Pagination

45-53

ISSN

1877-7171

Department/School

College Office - CHM

Publisher

IOS Press

Publication status

  • Published

Place of publication

Netherlands

Rights statement

Copyright 2013 – IOS Press and the authors

Socio-economic Objectives

200202 Evaluation of health outcomes

UN Sustainable Development Goals

3 Good Health and Well Being

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