January 25, 2012 9:04 AM

Narcissism puts men's health at risk

By
Monica DyBuncio
Topics
News ,
Men ,
Mental Health ,
Research

cocky, narcissistic, narcissism, arrogant, guy, man, stylish, stock, 4x3, hat, fedora (Credit: istockphoto)

(CBS) Do you really love yourself? If you're a man, you could be risking your health, according to a new study.

The study found narcissism - particularly in men - is tied to unhealthy stress on the body.

Narcissism is characterized as having an inflated self-esteem, little empathy, and a sense of entitlement.

The study, published Jan. 23 in the journal PLoS ONE, analyzed 106 volunteer students from American university - 79 females, 27 males, with were on average 20 years old. The volunteers were given a 40-item questionnaire called the Narcissistic Personality Inventory, which assesses five different components of narcissism: two unhealthy (exploitativeness and entitlement) and three healthy (leadership/authority, superiority/arrogance, and self-absorption/self-admiration). Researchers also measured participants' baseline levels of cortisol, a hormone that's responsible for the body's response to stress. High cortisol levels are generally correlated with high psychological stress.

Combining the data, the researchers found that males who had higher measures of the unhealthy components of narcissism also had higher levels of cortisol. The unhealthy components of narcissism were more than twice as likely to predict high cortisol in males than in females. No link was found between healthy narcissism and cortisol in either gender.

Why might narcissistic men be more stressed? "Even though narcissists have grandiose self-perceptions, they also have fragile views of themselves, and often resort to defensive strategies like aggression when their sense of superiority is threatened," study author David Reinhard, a graduate student in the department of psychology at the University of Virginia in Charlottesville, said in a written statement. According to Reinhard, these aggressive coping strategies are tied to high blood pressure would lead to "chronically elevated levels of stress."

"People with narcissism may be type-A, very driven, perfectionistic and seek high-stress situations, and the cortisol levels may be measuring that," Dr. Mark Russ, director of psychiatric services at Zucker Hillside Hospital in Glen Oaks, N.Y. who was not involved in the study, told USA Today. "There may be an overlap."

Why did narcissism affect men and not women? The study authors speculate that societal definitions of masculinity (with traits like arrogance or dominance) might play a role. "Threats to male gender roles and masculinity are constant, and provide a source of stress that make these roles difficult to maintain," the authors wrote.

Despite their differing stress levels, men and women are equally narcissistic, the study found. It also notes that narcissism is on the rise in the U.S., which may have potential "longterm public health consequences."


Add a Comment See all 17 Comments
by 123AustinScott February 6, 2012 2:16 AM EST
Narcissism may not just be bad for your social life; it may also hamper your health.
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by Charlieot2 January 26, 2012 9:14 AM EST
It's good thing I'm perfect in all ways and don't have to worry about character flaws impacting my health!
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by omnibus66 January 26, 2012 7:29 AM EST
Narcissism is about self indulgence, whereas loving oneself is about accepting who you are. There is a world of difference between the two, and sadly most people don't see it. They are not the same thing.
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by gadfly65 January 25, 2012 5:46 PM EST
CBS needs to do some fact checking; narcissism isn't about thinking highly of oneself. Self-absorption and not having a healthy concept of where you end and others begin are certainly stressful, and narcissists struggle with poor self esteem.
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by nazcap January 25, 2012 2:18 PM EST
I had no idea that self-absorption and arrogance were considered healthy traits. This speaks volumes about our society, and the devolution thereof.
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by LizInPA January 25, 2012 12:50 PM EST
Ya it is stressful when no one wants to have to deal with your needy self absorbed lashing out batsh*t bananas crap.
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by Forty-Four January 25, 2012 12:30 PM EST
I'm fantastic...how is that putting me at risk?

JK, I am not that kind of person; cept maybe when I am joking around with someone or just plain being sarcastic
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by SBCDreamSkinny January 25, 2012 12:26 PM EST
A study on 27 men is hardly enough to come to a conclusion on the health of men. This is really a bogus study and has no merit.
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by smagboy1 January 25, 2012 12:50 PM EST
I don't know if it's a bogus study all together, but, you're certainly correct in saying that 27 men is not a large enough sample size to enable any valid sweeping generalizations. And, as for the study's bogus-ness, when considering the other biases in the sample population (university students, volunteers, near the same age, self-selecting), I'd say you're certainly closer to right than wrong in your claim. ;-)
by SBCDreamSkinny January 25, 2012 12:25 PM EST
A study on 27 men is hardly enough to come to a conclusion on the health of men. This is really a bogus study and has no merit.
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by Transatlantique January 25, 2012 12:14 PM EST
"Narcissism is characterized as having an inflated self-esteem, little empathy, and a sense of entitlement."

----

Yeah, that sounds a lot like the feminist movement as well. Why do these news idiots always think they can shape public perception of men with such nonsense as these kinds of media blurbs? No two men, or women, are alike. What is the point they are trying to make? Do the writers not know this? These "studies" are always flawed because they only involve small groups of a certain segment of the population. That isn't scientific because there is no control group to check these findings.

Men suffer more in society because they are treated horribly, if anything is making cortisol levels rise, that is it. Just look at male genital mutilation and the fact that it has shown to raise cortisol levels to those of war prisoner torture victims. And that happens to male babies who should be protected from this under the 14th Amendment but are not.

Narcissism is a protective mechanism the mind produces to stay afloat. Even if these findings are true, what does it say about our treatment of men? When was the last time a woman was reprimanded because she didn't pay child support, register for selective service, or have to explain herself away because she was falsely accused of rape?

They did get it right about the fact that narcissism is on the rise. We can blame that on celebrity worship and reality television. Have you seen an episode of Mob Wives? That is narcissism to the hilt. They have to have elevated cortisol levels. Why didn't they include those women in the study?
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by gadfly65 January 25, 2012 5:48 PM EST
You have no clue what narcissism is; you can't learn it from television because it starts in the earliest stages of psychological development.
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