Examining sense of purpose and conscientiousness as unique correlates of health: A bifactor examination

Author:

Hill Patrick L1ORCID,Olaru Gabriel2,Allemand Mathias3

Affiliation:

1. Washington University in St. Louis, USA

2. Tilburg University, The Netherlands

3. University of Zurich, Switzerland

Abstract

Conscientiousness and sense of purpose consistently predict health, wellbeing, and health behavior. However, it remains an open question whether they are unique or overlapping predictors of health and wellbeing. The current study considered this question using the MOSAiCH study, a nationally representative sample of 2305 Swiss adults ( M: 52.33 years old; SD = 17.36). Participants reported on sense of purpose and conscientiousness, in addition to multiple health, wellbeing, and health behavior indicators (e.g. dietary practices, activity engagement, health conditions, psychological concerns, and doctor visits). Results found conscientiousness and sense of purpose were moderately associated with multiple health, wellbeing, and health behavior indicators. Bifactor modeling was employed to test the incremental validity of conscientiousness and sense of purpose, when accounting for their shared variance. The specific factor for purpose predicted outcomes even when accounting for conscientiousness. However, conscientiousness had little incremental validity over the general factor.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Applied Psychology

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