4.7 Article

Understanding the associations between personality traits and mental health in people with epilepsy and healthy controls

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 14, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1134188

Keywords

mental health; personality; big five; epilepsy; GHQ-12

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The aim of this study was to examine the relationships between Big Five personality traits, mental health, and epilepsy. The results showed that neuroticism was positively associated with mental health issues in both epilepsy patients and healthy controls, but the association was stronger in epilepsy patients. Conscientiousness was negatively related to mental health issues in both groups. Additionally, openness and extraversion were negatively related to mental health issues in healthy controls, but not in epilepsy patients.
ObjectivesThe aim of the current study was to test how epilepsy could moderate the associations between Big Five personality traits and mental health. MethodsThis cross-sectional study analyzed data from Understanding Society: UK Household Longitudinal (UKHLS), which relies on a complex multi-stage stratified sampling design. Personality traits were measured by the Big Five inventory whereas mental health where measured by the GHQ-12. A hierarchical regression and two multiple regressions were performed on 334 people with epilepsy with a mean age of 45.14 +/- 15.88 years old (41.32% males) and 26,484 healthy controls (42.5% males) with a mean age of 48.71 +/- 17.04 years old. ResultsNeuroticism was positively related to worse mental health in both people with epilepsy and healthy controls with a stronger relationship in people with epilepsy, but Conscientiousness was negatively related to worse mental health in both people with epilepsy and healthy controls. Moreover, Openness and Extraversion were negatively related to worse mental health in healthy controls but not in people with epilepsy. ConclusionPersonality traits are closely related to mental health in both people with epilepsy and healthy controls. Clinicians should use findings from this study to detect people with epilepsy who may be at high risk of poor mental health based on their personality traits.

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