The association between self-compassion and self-rated health in 26 samples

Abstract Background Although there is growing evidence of the relevance of self-compassion for understanding health outcomes, few studies have examined self-compassion in relation to self-reported physical health status, also known as self-rated health (SRH). This study addressed this gap by examini...

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Main Author: Fuschia M. Sirois
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-01-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-020-8183-1
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author Fuschia M. Sirois
author_facet Fuschia M. Sirois
author_sort Fuschia M. Sirois
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Although there is growing evidence of the relevance of self-compassion for understanding health outcomes, few studies have examined self-compassion in relation to self-reported physical health status, also known as self-rated health (SRH). This study addressed this gap by examining the associations between self-compassion and SRH across multiple samples and after accounting for the contributions of positive and negative affect. Methods Data from 26 samples (total N = 6127), comprised of 6 university student, 16 community adult, and 4 chronic illness samples, were included in the current analyses. Participants in each sample completed a survey including measures of self-compassion and SRH. Thirteen samples also completed a measure of positive and negative affect. The associations between self-compassion and SRH were statistically meta-analysed. Moderator analyses were conducted to test whether the associations varied as a function of sample type, age or participant sex. Semipartial correlations were calculated controlling for positive and negative affect in 13 samples and meta-analysed. Results Findings indicated that self-compassion was significantly associated with higher SRH across the 26 samples (r avg  = .25; CI: .22, .28). The associations did not however vary significantly across sample types, or as a function of participant sex or age. The meta-analyses of the adjusted effects found that self-compassion remained significantly associated with higher SRH after accounting the contributions of positive (sr avg  = .11; CI: .07, .15) and negative (sr avg  = .25; CI: .06, .15) affect. Conclusions The current study demonstrated that self-compassion is robustly associated with higher SRH across 26 samples and that this association remained significant after adjusting for the influence of positive and negative affect in 13 samples. Further longitudinal and experimental research is needed to verify the causal direction between self-compassion and SRH suggested by theory and the current findings.
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spelling doaj.art-64f5d4c4ffb74e7f93120a4b3ee189ad2022-12-22T03:14:40ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582020-01-0120111210.1186/s12889-020-8183-1The association between self-compassion and self-rated health in 26 samplesFuschia M. Sirois0Department of Psychology, University of SheffieldAbstract Background Although there is growing evidence of the relevance of self-compassion for understanding health outcomes, few studies have examined self-compassion in relation to self-reported physical health status, also known as self-rated health (SRH). This study addressed this gap by examining the associations between self-compassion and SRH across multiple samples and after accounting for the contributions of positive and negative affect. Methods Data from 26 samples (total N = 6127), comprised of 6 university student, 16 community adult, and 4 chronic illness samples, were included in the current analyses. Participants in each sample completed a survey including measures of self-compassion and SRH. Thirteen samples also completed a measure of positive and negative affect. The associations between self-compassion and SRH were statistically meta-analysed. Moderator analyses were conducted to test whether the associations varied as a function of sample type, age or participant sex. Semipartial correlations were calculated controlling for positive and negative affect in 13 samples and meta-analysed. Results Findings indicated that self-compassion was significantly associated with higher SRH across the 26 samples (r avg  = .25; CI: .22, .28). The associations did not however vary significantly across sample types, or as a function of participant sex or age. The meta-analyses of the adjusted effects found that self-compassion remained significantly associated with higher SRH after accounting the contributions of positive (sr avg  = .11; CI: .07, .15) and negative (sr avg  = .25; CI: .06, .15) affect. Conclusions The current study demonstrated that self-compassion is robustly associated with higher SRH across 26 samples and that this association remained significant after adjusting for the influence of positive and negative affect in 13 samples. Further longitudinal and experimental research is needed to verify the causal direction between self-compassion and SRH suggested by theory and the current findings.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-020-8183-1Self-compassionSelf-rated healthPositive affectNegative affect
spellingShingle Fuschia M. Sirois
The association between self-compassion and self-rated health in 26 samples
BMC Public Health
Self-compassion
Self-rated health
Positive affect
Negative affect
title The association between self-compassion and self-rated health in 26 samples
title_full The association between self-compassion and self-rated health in 26 samples
title_fullStr The association between self-compassion and self-rated health in 26 samples
title_full_unstemmed The association between self-compassion and self-rated health in 26 samples
title_short The association between self-compassion and self-rated health in 26 samples
title_sort association between self compassion and self rated health in 26 samples
topic Self-compassion
Self-rated health
Positive affect
Negative affect
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-020-8183-1
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