The Role of Personality in the Mental and Physical Health of World Trade Center Responders: Self-Reports Versus Informant-Reports

Author:

Oltmanns Joshua R.1ORCID,Ruggero Camilo2,Miao Jiaju3,Waszczuk Monika4ORCID,Yang Yuanyuan1,Clouston Sean A. P.5,Bromet Evelyn J.1,Luft Benjamin J.6,Kotov Roman1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Health, Stony Brook University

2. Department of Psychology, University of North Texas

3. Department of Applied Math and Statistics, Stony Brook University

4. Department of Psychology, Rosalind Franklin University

5. Department of Public Health, Stony Brook University

6. School of Medicine, Stony Brook University

Abstract

Personality is linked to important health outcomes, but most prior studies have relied on self-reports, making it possible that shared-method variance explains the associations. In the present study, we examined self-reports versus informant-reports of personality and multimethod outcomes. World Trade Center (WTC) responders and informants, 283 pairs, completed five-factor model personality measures and multimethod assessments of stressful events, functioning, mental disorders, 9/11-related treatment costs, body mass index (BMI), and daily activity across 3 years. Self-reports were uniquely related to stressful events and functioning. Both self-reports and informant-reports showed incremental validity over one another for mental disorder diagnoses and treatment costs. For objective outcomes daily activity and BMI, informant-reports showed incremental validity over self-reports, accounting for all self-report variance and more. The findings suggest that informant-reports of personality provide better validity for objective health outcomes, which has implications for understanding personality and its role in mental and physical health.

Funder

National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Clinical Psychology

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