Affect, Affective Variability, and Physical Health: Results from a Population-Based Investigation in China

Background: There is good evidence linking positive affect with adaptive psychological and physical health outcomes and negative affect with maladaptive outcomes, in multiple contexts and samples. However, recent research has suggested that the fluctuation of emotions, known as affective variability...

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Main Authors: Chan, D., Zhang, X., Fung, H., Hagger, Martin
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/4295
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author Chan, D.
Zhang, X.
Fung, H.
Hagger, Martin
author_facet Chan, D.
Zhang, X.
Fung, H.
Hagger, Martin
author_sort Chan, D.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Background: There is good evidence linking positive affect with adaptive psychological and physical health outcomes and negative affect with maladaptive outcomes, in multiple contexts and samples. However, recent research has suggested that the fluctuation of emotions, known as affective variability, may also be an important correlate of individuals’ health. Purpose: The present study examined the relationship between affect, affective variability, and self-reported health status in a large representative sample of adults in China. Method: We analyzed cross-sectional data retrieved from the World Health Organization’s study on global ageing and adults’ health. A total of 15,050 Chinese adults (aged between 18 and 99) from China reported their affective experiences during the previous day, perceived health, and their history of multiple chronic illnesses from their medical records (stroke, angina, diabetes, chronic lung disease, depression, and hypertension). Hierarchical multiple regression and logistic regression analyses were employed to analyze the data. Results: Independent of individuals’ mean levels of affect, affective variability was negatively related to subjective health conditions and positively related to diagnosed illness status, after controlling for demographic variables. Results suggest that affective variability increases the likelihood of reported impaired health and diagnosis of affect-related illnesses such as angina and depression. Conclusion: The present study highlighted the importance of studying the impact of affective variability, in addition to that of mean affect levels, on health.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-42952019-02-19T05:34:53Z Affect, Affective Variability, and Physical Health: Results from a Population-Based Investigation in China Chan, D. Zhang, X. Fung, H. Hagger, Martin Background: There is good evidence linking positive affect with adaptive psychological and physical health outcomes and negative affect with maladaptive outcomes, in multiple contexts and samples. However, recent research has suggested that the fluctuation of emotions, known as affective variability, may also be an important correlate of individuals’ health. Purpose: The present study examined the relationship between affect, affective variability, and self-reported health status in a large representative sample of adults in China. Method: We analyzed cross-sectional data retrieved from the World Health Organization’s study on global ageing and adults’ health. A total of 15,050 Chinese adults (aged between 18 and 99) from China reported their affective experiences during the previous day, perceived health, and their history of multiple chronic illnesses from their medical records (stroke, angina, diabetes, chronic lung disease, depression, and hypertension). Hierarchical multiple regression and logistic regression analyses were employed to analyze the data. Results: Independent of individuals’ mean levels of affect, affective variability was negatively related to subjective health conditions and positively related to diagnosed illness status, after controlling for demographic variables. Results suggest that affective variability increases the likelihood of reported impaired health and diagnosis of affect-related illnesses such as angina and depression. Conclusion: The present study highlighted the importance of studying the impact of affective variability, in addition to that of mean affect levels, on health. 2015 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/4295 10.1007/s12529-015-9510-2 fulltext
spellingShingle Chan, D.
Zhang, X.
Fung, H.
Hagger, Martin
Affect, Affective Variability, and Physical Health: Results from a Population-Based Investigation in China
title Affect, Affective Variability, and Physical Health: Results from a Population-Based Investigation in China
title_full Affect, Affective Variability, and Physical Health: Results from a Population-Based Investigation in China
title_fullStr Affect, Affective Variability, and Physical Health: Results from a Population-Based Investigation in China
title_full_unstemmed Affect, Affective Variability, and Physical Health: Results from a Population-Based Investigation in China
title_short Affect, Affective Variability, and Physical Health: Results from a Population-Based Investigation in China
title_sort affect, affective variability, and physical health: results from a population-based investigation in china
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/4295