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Chapter 12 PERSONALITY AND HEALTH

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Title: Chapter 12 PERSONALITY AND HEALTH


1
Chapter 12 PERSONALITY AND HEALTH
  • .

D.F.Marks, M.Murray, B.Evans, C.Willig,
C.Woodall C.M. Sykes (2005) Health Psychology
Theory, Research and Practice (2nd edition).
London Sage
2
PERSONALITY AND HEALTH
  • Introduction
  • Psychoanalysis and psychosomatic medicine
  • Explaining links between personality and disease
  • The Type A/B personality, hostility and coronary
    heart disease
  • Further studies
  • Summary

3
INTRODUCTION
  • The view that psychological disorders are best
    explained by psychological causes, and that
    physical disorders are attributable to physical
    causes, is an oversimplification.
  • Since the fifth century BC, an influential
    doctrine presupposed that there is a physical
    basis for all disorders - whether physical or
    psychological. This model is more commonly known
    as the
  • THE HIPPOCRATIC TRADITION

4
The Hippocratic Tradition
  • This assumes that psychological and physical
    disorders are both attributable to an imbalance
    of the four bodily humours
  • Blood
  • Phlegm
  • Black bile
  • Yellow bile
  • For further discussion, see Chapters 1 and 4

5
The Hippocratic Tradition
  • One feature of the doctrine of the four humours
    that even today finds its echo in psychological
    theory is Galens description of the four
    classical temperaments
  • The sanguine has an excess of blood
  • The choleric of yellow bile
  • The phlegmatic of phlegm
  • The melancholic of black bile
  • In Eysencks (1970) theory of the two basic
    dimensions of personality, extravert-introvert
    and stable-unstable, he pointed out that the
    classical temperaments do correspond quite
    closely with four extremes using his personality
    test
  • The stable extravert (sanguine)
  • The unstable extravert (choleric)
  • The stable introvert (phlegmatic)
  • The unstable introvert (melancholic)

6
The fall of the humoral theory
  • The humoral theory was eventually abandoned
    following the founding of the modem science of
    cellular pathology in the 1850s.
  • This was the key that opened the door to our
    contemporary understanding of physical diseases.
  • In recent years, advances in our understanding of
    neurotransmitters and the development of DNA
    research, together with criticism of the cost and
    efficacy of psychotherapy, has led to an
    increased enthusiasm for physiological
    explanations of psychological disorders.

7
PSYCHOANALYSIS AND PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDICINE
  • The psychosomatic approach has its roots in
    Freuds theories of HYSTERIA
  • conditions where the patient appears to have a
    neurological or other physical disorder but where
    there is no obvious physical basis for it
  • Freuds theories were extended to provide
    psychological explanations for the causation of
    real organic disorders such as heart disease and
    cancer.

8
PSYCHOANALYSIS AND PSYCHOSOMATIC MEDICINE
  • The term hysteria is not very often used
    nowadays, having been largely replaced by
    psychosomatic disorder or somatoform disorder.
  • This idea provoked controversy between those who
    believe that they are modern forms of hysteria
    and those who believe that they are new organic
    disorders whose physical basis is not yet fully
    understood.
  • Examples of such conditions are myalgic
    encephalomyelitis (ME) and chronic fatigue
    syndrome (CFS).

9
Research on the Psychosomatic Traditions within
Psychoanalysis (Brown, 2004)
  • According to George Groddeck, all illness is
    unconsciously motivated and has a meaning for the
    sufferer. For example
  • An hysterical pregnancy might be motivated by an
    unconscious wish to have a baby
  • A case of laryngitis be motivated by a desire not
    to speak
  • A heart attack might be viewed as an unconscious
    attempt to commit suicide
  • An alternative approach was that of Wilhelm
    Reich. He believed that, among many other
    things, repressed sexual feelings could lead to a
    blocking of mysterious forms of organic energy
    leading to the development of cancer.

10
Franz Alexanders Theory of Psychosomatic
Disorders (1950)
  • Franz Alexanders theory combines psychoanalytic
    theory with hypotheses about physiological
    mechanisms, principally those involving the
    autonomic nervous system (ANS).
  • He emphasizes the distinction between
  • Sympathetic division of the ANS that controls
    emotional arousal and the fight-or-flight
    emergency reactions of the organism.
  • Parasympathetic division that controls relaxation
    and the slowing down of functions activated by
    the sympathetic division.

11
Franz Alexanders Theory of Psychosomatic
Disorders (1950)
  • Sustained activity in either branch of the ANS
    without the counterbalancing effect of the other
    can have disease consequences. For example
  • Excessive sympathetic activity contributes to
    cardiovascular disease, diabetes and rheumatoid
    arthritis
  • Excessive parasympathetic activity contributes to
    gastrointestinal disorders including dyspepsia,
    ulcers and colitis
  • Alexanders theories also led to the development
    in contemporary Health Psychology of the
    distinction between the Type A and Type B
    personalities and their differential
    susceptibility to cardiovascular disease, and to
    recent related work on hostility and
    cardiovascular disease.

12
Criticisms of the Psychosomatic Tradition
  • Proponents of the psychosomatic approach have
    been criticized for much the same reasons that
    psychoanalysis has been criticized more generally
    (Webster, 1996)
  • Their theories were highly speculative and relied
    on elaborate interpretations of clinical data
    rather than controlled statistical studies.
  • They suffered from the defect of being
    retrospective, seeking to explain patients
    illnesses as caused by psychological
    characteristics already known to the clinician,
    rather than prospective, making predictions about
    future illness on the basis of present
    psychological assessments.

13
Problems of explanation in research on
personality and illness
  • Direction of causality
  • Since cross-sectional studies are correlational,
    there is no certainty regarding which is the
    cause and which is the effect.
  • Background variables
  • Two variables that are associated may both be
    related to a third variable that has not been
    measured.

14
Problems of explanation in research on
personality and illness
  • Self-reported illness and the distress-prone
    personality
  • Health psychology research often relies upon
    self-reported illness that has not been verified
    by objective medical tests.
  • Dimensions of personality
  • The number of personality dimensions to evaluate
    remains controversial.

15
Problems of explanation in research on
personality and illness
  • Physiological mechanisms versus health behaviour
  • It is uncertain whether it is health behaviour or
    physiological differences that are causing
    illness.

16
THE TYPE A/B PERSONALITY
  • Speculation about an association between the
    Type A and B personalities and CHD has a history
    which dates back at least fifty years
    (Riska,2000).

17
THE TYPE A/B PERSONALITY
  • The classification of individuals as Type A or B
    was initially made on the basis of a structured
    interview, where people were not only asked
    questions about their Type A/B modes of
    behaviour, but were also provoked into directly
    manifesting such behaviour.
  • For example, by being subjected to pauses and
    delays in the interview, deliberately interrupted
    and challenged about their answers to questions.
  • Later studies adopted a less time consuming
    approach using standardized self-report
    questionnaires such as the Jenkins Activity
    Survey (JAS).

18
Research on Type A/B Personality and CHD The
Western Collaborative Group Study
  • The Western Collaborative Group Study (WCGS) is
    the key pioneering study of Type A/B personality
    and CHD
  • It assessed over 3,000 Californian men, aged from
    39 to 59 at entry, using structured interviews
    and followed up initially over a period of eight
    and a half years, and later extending over 22
    years.
  • The results reported that Type As were twice as
    likely as Type Bs to suffer from subsequent CHD.
  • Of the sample 7 developed some signs of CHD and
    two-thirds of these were Type As.
  • This increased risk was apparent even when other
    risk factors, such as blood pressure and
    cigarette smoking, were statistically controlled
    for.

19
Research on Type A/B Personality and CHD The
Western Collaborative Group Study
  • Similar results were subsequently published from
    another large-scale study conducted in
    Framingham, Massachusetts, this time with both
    men and women
  • It was confidently asserted that Type A
    characteristics were as much a risk factor for
    heart disease as high blood pressure, high
    cholesterol levels and smoking.
  • However, subsequent research failed to support
    these early findings.

20
Research on Type A/B Personality and CHD The
Western Collaborative Group Study
  • When Ragland and Brand (1988) conducted a 22-year
    follow-up of the WCGS, the early reports appeared
    to have exaggerated the significance of the Type
    A risk, and three subsequent follow-ups yielded
    inconsistent findings.
  • Using mortality as the crucially important
    measure, they found
  • Type A/B behaviour was positively but not
    significantly associated with coronary heart
    disease in the first and third intervals,
    significantly negatively associated . . . in the
    second interval and not associated in the fourth
    interval.
  • The results confirm the importance of the
    traditional coronary heart disease risk factors,
    and raise a substantial question about the
    importance of Type A/B behaviour as a risk factor
    for coronary heart disease mortality. (Ragland
    and Brand, 1988, p. 462)

21
Re-evaluation of Type A/B Research (Evans, 1990)
  • Re-evaluation of Type A/B research showed that
    the bulk of the positive findings came from
    cross-sectional studies rather than prospective
    studies.
  • Positive prospective findings also tended to come
    from population studies of initially healthy
    volunteers.
  • Studies of high risk individuals either failed to
    show a relationship with the Type A/B personality
    or produced a reverse finding with Type As
    actually having better outcomes than Type Bs.

22
Re-evaluation of Type A/B Research (Evans, 1990)
  • While healthy Type As may be more at risk than
    Type Bs, they are more likely than Type Bs to
    modify their risky health behaviours, thereby
    giving themselves a better long-term prognosis.
  • Studies using the structured interviews to assess
    personality were much more likely to produce
    positive results than those using questionnaires.
  • Recent reviews and meta-analyses of Type A/B
    research all conclude that there is little or no
    evidence of a relationship with CHD (Hemingway
    and Marmot, 1999 Rozanski et al. 1999 Myrtek,
    2001)

23
HOSTILITY
  • Research on hostility and health is divided
    between studies using structured interviews (SI)
    and those using questionnaires, usually the
    Cook-Medley Ho Scale
  • Research using the SI has produced more positive
    findings than research using self-report
    questionnaires (see Miller et al., 1996).

24
HOSTILITY
  • Further reviews all indicate that existing
    studies are of very mixed quality, with
    inconsistent results.
  • Myrtek (2001) conducted a meta-analysis and
    concluded that
  • There was evidence of a statistically significant
    but very weak relationship for prospective
    studies of initially healthy individuals.
  • But not for studies that have followed up
    patients already diagnosed with CHD.
  • The statistical relationship between measures of
    hostility and health is, at most, a weak one.

25
FURTHER STUDIES Affect, anxiety and depression
  • Negative affect, anxiety and depression have been
    found to be associated with an increased risk of
    CHD.
  • It should be noted, however, that these findings
    are open to a number of different
    interpretations.
  • There is very little clear-cut evidence to
    support the view that personality variables are
    associated with risk of cancer or of relapse
    following treatment.

26
FURTHER STUDIES Sense of coherence
  • Sense of coherence is the ability to perceive
    ones world as meaningful and manageable.
  • Surtees et al.s (2003) study of the relationship
    between sense of coherence and mortality from all
    causes for a very large UK sample showed that
  • A strong sense of coherence was associated with a
    30 reduction in mortality from all causes, more
    specifically for cardiovascular disease.
  • There was a similar reduction in mortality in
    cancer for men but not for women.

27
Research on sense of coherence
  • Yousfi et al. (2004) found a number of small but
    statistically significant correlations, between
    emotional lability and general disease
    vulnerability.
  • Reed et al. (1994) investigated the relationship
    between realistic acceptance and survival time of
    men suffering from AIDS. They found that those
    who were assessed as showing a realistic
    acceptance of their deteriorating condition and
    eventual death had a mean survival time that was
    nine months less than those who were assessed as
    being unduly optimistic.
  • Taylor and Browns (1988) literature review
    concerning mental health, concluded that overly
    positive self-evaluations, exaggerated
    perceptions of control and mastery and
    unrealistic optimism, were associated with good
    mental health.

28
FURTHER STUDIES Locus of control
  • Locus of control is another personality variable
    that has been of interest to health psychologists
    over the last 20 years
  • This concept was applied to health beliefs by
    Wallston et al. (1978) who developed the
    Multidimensional Health Locus of Control (MHLC)
    Scale.

29
MHLC Scale
  • This questionnaire has three subscales.
  • It measures the extent to which people attribute
    their state of health to their own behaviour
    (internal locus), and/or external factors
    including both powerful others, especially
    medical professionals, and chance or fate.
  • The internal locus of control scale has much in
    common with the concept of self-efficacy
    (Bandura, 1977).

30
Research on Locus of Control
  • Norman and Bennetts (1996) literature review
    concluded that the relationship between locus of
    control and health behaviour is a weak one.
  • Self-efficacy appears to be a rather better
    predictor of health behaviour.

31
SUMMARY
  • Traditional explanations based on the Galenic
    doctrine of the four humours have now been
    replaced by the medical model.
  • The modern history of psychological explanations
    for physical symptoms begins with Freuds
    theories of hysteria.
  • Proponents of the psychosomatic approach
    generally failed to produce convincing evidence
    in support of their hypotheses.
  • However, the theories of Franz Alexander on the
    physiological mechanisms that could underlie the
    relationship between the psychology of the
    individual and organic disease have led to modern
    conceptions of the Type A personality and stress
    as contributors to cardiovascular disease.

32
SUMMARY (continued)
  • Early indications that the Type A personality is
    a risk factor for cardiovascular disease were not
    confirmed by later studies.
  • Attention has shifted to hostility which does
    seem to be a risk factor, although much less so
    than traditional risk factors such as high blood
    pressure or cigarette smoking.
  • There is some recent evidence that sense of
    coherence may be associated with coronary heart
    disease, cancer and all cause mortality.
  • Internal locus of control is only very weakly
    associated with positive health behaviours.
  • Self-efficacy shows an overall stronger
    relationship, yet the level of prediction is
    still relatively modest.
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