
For Your Health, Pick A Mate Who Is
Conscientious And, Perhaps, Also Neurotic
ScienceDaily (May 6, 2009) — Conscientiousness
is a good thing in a mate, researchers report, not just because it's easier to
live with someone who washes the dishes without being asked, but also because
having a conscientious partner may actually be good for one's health. Their
study, of adults over age 50, also found that women, but not men, get an added
health benefit when paired with someone who is conscientious and neurotic.
This is the first large-scale analysis of what the authors call the
"compensatory conscientiousness effect," the boost in health reported
by those with conscientious spouses or romantic partners. The study appears this
month in Psychological Science.
"Highly conscientious people are more organized and responsible and tend
to follow through with their obligations, to be more impulse controlled and to
follow rules," said University of Illinois psychology professor Brent
Roberts, who led the study. Highly neurotic people tend to be more moody and
anxious, and to worry, he said.
Researchers have known since the early 1990s that people who are more
conscientious tend to live longer than those who are less so. They are more
likely to exercise, eat nutritious foods and adhere to vitamin or drug regimens,
and are less likely to smoke, abuse drugs or take unwarranted risks, all of
which may explain their better health. They also tend to have more stable
relationships than people with low conscientiousness.
Most studies have found a very different outcome for people who are highly
neurotic. They tend to report poorer health and less satisfying relationships.
Many studies focus on how specific personality traits may affect one's own
health, Roberts said, but few have considered how one's personality can
influence the health of another.
"There's been kind of an individualistic bias in personality
research," he said. "But human beings are not islands. We are an
incredibly interdependent species."
Roberts and his colleagues at the University of Illinois and the University
of Michigan looked at the association of personality and self-reported health
among more than 2,000 couples taking part in the Health and Retirement Study, a
representative study of the U.S. population over age 50. The study asked
participants to rate their own levels of neuroticism and conscientiousness and
to answer questions about the quality of their health. Participants also filled
out a questionnaire that asked them whether or not a health problem limited
their ability to engage in a range of activities such as jogging one block,
climbing a flight of stairs, shopping, dressing or bathing.
As other studies have found, the researchers found that those who described
themselves as highly conscientious also reported better health and said they
were more able to engage in a variety of physical activities than those who
reported low conscientiousness.
For the first time, however, the researchers also found a significant,
self-reported health benefit that accompanied marriage to a conscientious
person, even among those who described themselves as highly conscientious.
"It appears that even if you are really highly conscientious, you can
still benefit from a spouse's conscientiousness," Roberts said. "It
makes sense that regardless of what your attributes are, if you have people in
your social network that have resources, such as conscientiousness, that can
always help."
A more unusual finding involved an added health benefit reported by women who
were paired with highly conscientious men who were also highly neurotic, Roberts
said. The same benefit was not seen in men with highly conscientious and
neurotic female partners. While both men and women benefit from being paired
with a conscientious mate, Roberts said, only the women saw a modest boost in
their health from being with a man who was also neurotic.
"The effect here is not much larger than the effect of aspirin on
cardiovascular health, which is a well-known small effect," he said.
Asked whether women looking for long-term mates should choose a man who is
conscientious and neurotic over one who is simply conscientious, Roberts said,
"I wouldn't recommend it."
Adapted from materials provided by University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, via EurekAlert!,
a service of AAAS.
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