Neuroticism mediates the association between childhood abuse and the well-being of community dwelling adult volunteers

Author:

Fujimura YotaORCID,Shimura Akiyoshi,Morishita Chihiro,Tamada Yu,Tanabe Hajime,Kusumi Ichiro,Inoue Takeshi

Abstract

Abstract Background Previous studies reported that the experience of maltreatment in childhood reduces subjective well-being in adulthood and that neuroticism is negatively associated with subjective well-being. However, the interrelationship between childhood maltreatment, adult life events, neuroticism, and subjective well-being has not been analyzed to date. Methods A total of 404 adult volunteers provided responses to the following questionnaires: 1) Childhood Abuse and Trauma Scale, 2) Life Experiences Survey, 3) Neuroticism Subscale of the Shortened Eysenck Personality Questionnaire-Revised, and 4) Subjective Well-Being Inventory. The path model was used to analyze possible interrelationships among these parameters. Results The effect of childhood abuse on subjective well-being was indirect and was mediated by neuroticism. The effect of neuroticism on the negative, but not positive, change score on the Life Experiences Survey was significant. The indirect effect of neuroticism on subjective well-being was not significant via either negative or positive change scores. Conclusions This study demonstrated that age, subjective social status, neuroticism, and negative and positive life events were significantly associated with subjective well-being. Furthermore, using path analysis, we demonstrated the mediating role of neuroticism in the indirect effect of childhood abuse on subjective well-being.

Funder

a Grant-in-Aid for Scientific Research from the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology

Research and Development Grant for Comprehensive Research for Persons with Disabilities from Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development

a grant from SENSHIN Medical Research Foundation

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Biological Psychiatry,Psychiatry and Mental health,General Psychology,Social Psychology

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