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The present work presents two studies that examined the association of perfectionism,
operationally defined by Hewi t t and Fl e t t ' s (1991) multidimensional mode l of perfectionism,
with health and subjective well-being (SWB). The underlying question of this research was
whether perfectionism could be beneficial as well as detrimental to health and well-being, as this
is one of the mos t highly debated questions in the current literature. In samples of relatively
healthy university students (n = 538) and community adults suffering from various chronic
illnesses (n = 772), results from Study One indicated that socially prescribed perfectionism (SPP)
is directly associated wi th poor e r he a l th and well-being. Results further showed f rom a personcentered perspective that there is a l a rge group of individuals wi th high levels of SPP and that i t
is indeed these individuals who reported the poorest health and lowe s t levels of well-being.
Other-oriented perfectionism was found to be unrelated to health and SWB. Findings revealed
that when perfectionism is self-imposed (i.e., self-oriented perfectionism; SOP), i t is neither
healthy nor unhealthy in an absolute sense. From the variable-centered perspective, this
conclusion was supported by the f a c t tha t SOP was associated wi th both positive (e.g., be t t e r
mental health and highe r levels of SWB in the student sample), and nega t ive correlates (e.g.,
higher levels of negative affect, stress, and neuroticism in both samples). Evidence f rom the
chronically-ill sample further substantiated this conclusion by showing that there may be an
optimal level of SOP, because mode r a t e levels of SOP we r e found to be associated with be t t e r
health and highe r levels of SWB, whereas levels tha t we r e too low or too high we r e found to be
associated with poor e r health and lowe r levels of SWB. Findings f rom the person-centered
approach we r e particularly informative, in that they not only demonstrated tha t unique profiles of |
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