Procrastination and health: A longitudinal test of the roles of stress and health behaviours

Author:

Sirois Fuschia M.1ORCID,Stride Christopher B.2ORCID,Pychyl Timothy A.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology Durham University Durham UK

2. Institute of Work Psychology University of Sheffield Sheffield UK

3. Department of Psychology Carleton University Ottawa Ontario Canada

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesProcrastination is a common form of self‐regulation failure that a growing evidence base suggests can confer risk for poor health outcomes, especially when it becomes habitual. However, the proposed linkages of chronic procrastination to health outcomes have not been tested over time or accounted for the contributions of higher‐order personality factors linked to both chronic procrastination and health‐related outcomes. We addressed these issues by examining the role of chronic procrastination in health outcomes over time in which the hypothesized links of procrastination to health problems operate via stress and health behaviours.DesignThree‐wave longitudinal study with 1‐month intervals.MethodsParticipants (N = 379) completed measures of trait procrastination at Time 1, and measures of health behaviours, stress and health problems at each time point, in a lab setting.ResultsProcrastination and the health variables were inter‐related in the expected directions across the three assessments. Chronic procrastination was positively associated with stress and negatively with health behaviours at each time point. Path analysis testing a cross‐lagged longitudinal mediation model found an indirect relationship operating between procrastination and health problems via stress, after accounting for the contributions of conscientiousness and neuroticism.ConclusionsThis research extends previous work by demonstrating that the links between chronic procrastination and poor health are accounted for mainly by higher stress, after accounting for other key traits, and that these associations are robust over time. The findings are discussed in terms of the importance of addressing habitual self‐regulation failure for improving health.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Applied Psychology,General Medicine

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3. Procrastination, Distress and Life Satisfaction across the Age Range – A German Representative Community Study

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