Extraversion personality, perceived health and activity participation among community-dwelling aging adults in Hong Kong.

Activity participation is essential to the wellbeing of aging adults. Divergent levels of activity participation within aging populations have been explained from diverse perspectives, but the interaction effects of key determinants, such as personality and health, are often ignored. This study exam...

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Main Authors: Daniel W L Lai, Nan Qin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209154
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spelling doaj-9e1894c02eb34d34afda3a251728ff962021-03-03T21:02:55ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-011312e020915410.1371/journal.pone.0209154Extraversion personality, perceived health and activity participation among community-dwelling aging adults in Hong Kong.Daniel W L LaiNan QinActivity participation is essential to the wellbeing of aging adults. Divergent levels of activity participation within aging populations have been explained from diverse perspectives, but the interaction effects of key determinants, such as personality and health, are often ignored. This study examines the effects of extravert personality on aging adults' activity levels by addressing its interaction with perceived physical health and mental health. A sample of 304 adults aged 50 and older was selected using systematic sampling from participants of an institute for promoting active aging at a university in Hong Kong in 2017. Data on socio-demographic characteristics, perceived physical and mental health, extraversion personality traits, and level of activity participation were collected using a telephone survey. Most participants (46.7%) reported moderate activity levels and over a quarter (26.6%) reported high or low activity levels. Multi-nominal logistic regression analyses show that extraversion was associated with an increased likelihood of reporting moderate (OR = 1.85, p = .036) but not high (p > .05) activity levels when adjusted for perceived physical and mental health and socio-demographics, with low activity levels being the constant comparison. Meanwhile, extraversion predicted both moderate (OR = 3.84, p = .014) and high (OR = 5.06, p = .032) activity levels for participants with poor or average perceived mental health. However, the interaction effects of extraversion with perceived physical health or mental health were not significant in predicting either moderate or high activity levels (p > .05). The implications for enhancing activity participation among aging adults are discussed in view of both personality and perceived health status.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209154
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniel W L Lai
Nan Qin
spellingShingle Daniel W L Lai
Nan Qin
Extraversion personality, perceived health and activity participation among community-dwelling aging adults in Hong Kong.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Daniel W L Lai
Nan Qin
author_sort Daniel W L Lai
title Extraversion personality, perceived health and activity participation among community-dwelling aging adults in Hong Kong.
title_short Extraversion personality, perceived health and activity participation among community-dwelling aging adults in Hong Kong.
title_full Extraversion personality, perceived health and activity participation among community-dwelling aging adults in Hong Kong.
title_fullStr Extraversion personality, perceived health and activity participation among community-dwelling aging adults in Hong Kong.
title_full_unstemmed Extraversion personality, perceived health and activity participation among community-dwelling aging adults in Hong Kong.
title_sort extraversion personality, perceived health and activity participation among community-dwelling aging adults in hong kong.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Activity participation is essential to the wellbeing of aging adults. Divergent levels of activity participation within aging populations have been explained from diverse perspectives, but the interaction effects of key determinants, such as personality and health, are often ignored. This study examines the effects of extravert personality on aging adults' activity levels by addressing its interaction with perceived physical health and mental health. A sample of 304 adults aged 50 and older was selected using systematic sampling from participants of an institute for promoting active aging at a university in Hong Kong in 2017. Data on socio-demographic characteristics, perceived physical and mental health, extraversion personality traits, and level of activity participation were collected using a telephone survey. Most participants (46.7%) reported moderate activity levels and over a quarter (26.6%) reported high or low activity levels. Multi-nominal logistic regression analyses show that extraversion was associated with an increased likelihood of reporting moderate (OR = 1.85, p = .036) but not high (p > .05) activity levels when adjusted for perceived physical and mental health and socio-demographics, with low activity levels being the constant comparison. Meanwhile, extraversion predicted both moderate (OR = 3.84, p = .014) and high (OR = 5.06, p = .032) activity levels for participants with poor or average perceived mental health. However, the interaction effects of extraversion with perceived physical health or mental health were not significant in predicting either moderate or high activity levels (p > .05). The implications for enhancing activity participation among aging adults are discussed in view of both personality and perceived health status.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0209154
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