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Domain and Facet Personality Predictors of All-Cause Mortality Among Medicare Patients Aged 65 to 100

Alexander Weiss, PhD and Paul T. Costa, Jr, PhD

From the Laboratory of Personality and Cognition, National Institute on Aging, National Institutes of Health, Department of Health and Human Services, Baltimore, MD.



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Figure 1. Kaplan-Meier curve showing the proportion of survivors with high (T > 55), average (T = 45–55), and low (T < 45) scores on the NEO-FFI Neuroticism domain during the approximately 5-year follow-up from the baseline personality assessments made during the baseline phase of the Medicare Demonstration.

 


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Figure 2. Kaplan-Meier curve showing the proportion of survivors with high (T > 55), average (T = 45–55), and low (T < 45) scores on the NEO-FFI Agreeableness domain during the approximately 5-year follow-up from the baseline personality assessments made during the baseline phase of the Medicare Demonstration. Survival curves for average and high scorers overlap.

 


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Figure 3. Kaplan-Meier curve showing the proportion of survivors with high (T > 55), average (T = 45–55), and low (T < 45) scores on the NEO-FFI Conscientiousness domain during the approximately 5-year follow-up from the baseline personality assessments made during the baseline phase of the Medicare Demonstration.

 





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