The relationship of dispositional compassion with well-being: a study with a 15-year prospective follow-up

Aino I. L. Saarinen, Liisa Keltikangas-Jarvinen, Laura Pulkki-Raback, Claude Robert Cloninger, Marko Elovainio, Terho Lehtimaki, Olli Raitakari, Mirka Hintsanen

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Sammanfattning

We investigated the associations of individual's compassion for others with his/her affective and cognitive well-being over a long-term follow-up. We used data from the prospective Young Finns Study (N = 1312-1699) between 1997-2012. High compassion was related to higher indicators of affective well-being: higher positive affect (B = 0.221, p <.001), lower negative affect (B = -0.358, p <.001), and total score of affective well-being (the relationship of positive versus negative affect) (B = 0.345, p <.001). Moreover, high compassion was associated with higher indicators of cognitive well-being: higher social support (B = 0.194, p <.001), life satisfaction (B = 0.149, p <.001), subjective health (B = 0.094, p <.001), optimism (B = 0.307, p <.001), and total score of cognitive well-being (B = 0.265, p <.001). Longitudinal analyses showed that high compassion predicted higher affective well-being over a 15-year follow-up (B = 0.361, p <.001) and higher social support over a 10-year follow-up (B = 0.230, p <.001). Finally, compassion was more likely to predict well-being (B = [-0.076; 0.090]) than vice versa, even though the predictive relationships were rather modest by magnitude.
Originalspråkengelska
TidskriftJournal of Positive Psychology
Volym15
Nummer6
Sidor (från-till)806-820
Antal sidor15
ISSN1743-9760
DOI
StatusPublicerad - 1 nov. 2020
MoE-publikationstypA1 Tidskriftsartikel-refererad

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