A Psychophysiological Examination of the Mutability of Type D Personality in a Therapeutic Trial

Author:

Hodgson Kirsty L.1,Clayton Debbie A.1,Carmi Michael A.2,Carmi Louise H.2,Ruden Ronald A.3,Fraser William D.4,Cameron Donnie5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Applied Psychology, Cardiff Metropolitan University, Cardiff, UK

2. Psychological Therapies, Harley Street Therapy Centre, London, UK

3. Yaffe Ruden and Associates, Primary Care, New York, NY, USA

4. Department of Endocrinology and Department of Clinical Biochemistry, Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK

5. Norwich Medical School, University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK

Abstract

Abstract. Identifying the associations between health and personality has been a focus for psychophysiological research. Type D personality is associated with predisposition to physical and psychological ill-health. This statistician-blind parallel-group controlled trial (intervention group vs. waiting list control group) examined the impact of Havening Techniques on the Type D constituents of negative affect (NA) and social inhibition (SI). One hundred twenty-five adult (18+ years) participants in the United Kingdom (72 females, 53 males) completed the Type D Scale-14 (DS14) measure of Type D personality at baseline (T1), 24-hours (T2), and at 1-month (T3). Forty participants in the treatment group received additional stress biomarker assessment of heart rate, blood pressure, and salivary cortisol. Type D caseness remained stable in the waiting list participants ( n = 57). In the treatment group ( n = 68); NA, SI, and total scores decreased from T1 to T2 ( p < .001, p < .001, and p < .001, respectively), and from T2 to T3 ( p = .004, p < .001, and p < .001, respectively), significantly transmuting to non-caseness ( p < .001 for T1 to T2; p = .025 for T2 to T3). Between T1 and T2, decreases in cortisol ( p < .001), diastolic blood pressure ( p < .001), and systolic blood pressure ( p < .001) were demonstrated. Heart rate fell nonsignificantly between T1 and T2 ( p = .063), but significantly from T1 to T3 ( p = .048). The findings of this study indicate the potential mutability of the psychophysiological illness-prone characteristics of Type D personality.

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Subject

Physiology,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology,General Neuroscience

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