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- IRMS - Nicolae Testemitanu SUMPh
- 1. COLECȚIA INSTITUȚIONALĂ
- MedEspera: International Medical Congress for Students and Young Doctors
- MedEspera 2020
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12710/11774
Title: | The role of personality traits in sleep quality |
Authors: | Cojocaru, Virginia |
Keywords: | sleep quality;personality traits;PSQI;PID-5 |
Issue Date: | 2020 |
Publisher: | MedEspera |
Citation: | COJOCARU, Virginia. The role of personality traits in sleep quality. In: MedEspera: the 8th Internat. Medical Congress for Students and Young Doctors: abstract book. Chișinău: S. n., 2020, p. 250. |
Abstract: | Introduction. It is well accepted that disturbed sleep is influenced by a number of
predisposing, precipitating, and perpetuating factors, and these may be biological,
environmental, behavioural or psychological in nature. Personality may act as a predisposing,
and potentially perpetuating factor, and literature concurs with the fact that disturbed sleep is
related to increased neuroticism, internalization, anxious concerns and perfectionism. Aim of the study. To determine what maladaptive personality traits are the most frequently
present among patients with disturbed sleep.
Materials and methods. In this study participated 56 patients (age range 25-71 years) that
have addressed themselves to the Department of Somnology from the Institute of Neurology
and Neurosurgery „Diomid Gherman”. They completed the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index
(PSQI). This self-reported instrument evaluates sleep quality for the last month and the
Personality Inventory for DSM-5 (PID-5), a 220-item self-rated personality trait assessment
scale for adults, that measures maladaptive personality traits.
Results. From 56 patients, 35 of them (63% ) showed poor sleep quality and 21 (37%) good
sleep quality. From 25 personality trait facets assessed of PID-5, higher average scores were
observed in the following facets: Anxiousness (in 7% of cases), Attention Seeking (7%),
Emotional Lability (7%), Hostility (7%), Intimacy Avoidance (9%), Separation insecurity
(9%), Suspiciousness (9%) and Rigid Perfectionism (11%). The only trait domain detected was
Negative Affect.
Conclusions. The most prominent personality characteristic observed in our study is Rigid
perfectionism. This may be because the maladaptive form of perfectionism includes concern
over mistakes and excessively high personal standards and is associated with worry and
rumination. Worry and rumination at bedtime are, in turn, assumed to lead to sleep onset and
sleep maintenance difficulties. The predominant domain of Negative Affect detected in our
study shows that people with sleep complain have frequent and intense experiences of a wide
range of negative emotions: instability of emotional experiences and mood, feelings of
nervousness, tenseness, fears of being alone due to rejection, frequent angry feelings, feelings
of being mistreated, avoidance of interpersonal attachments. These outcomes provide objective
support for further analytical studies in order to find out if there is a significant difference
between good sleepers and bad sleepers in correlation with these personality traits. |
URI: | https://medespera.asr.md/wp-content/uploads/ABSTRACT-BOOK.pdf http://repository.usmf.md/handle/20.500.12710/11774 |
Appears in Collections: | MedEspera 2020
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