The Goldsmith Theory of personality types was first
published in the 1950s. That study divided personality into a binary of high-strung
A-types and easy-going B-types. The study's initial purpose was to find a correlation
between personality type (behavior and attitude) and coronary disease. The type D
personality was defined by Johan Denollet in the late 1990s and attempts to further
refine Goldsmith's theory. He finds that over 20% of the population has what he calls a
Type D personality, characterized by social inhibition, worry and anxiety. Around 50%
of Denollet's cardiac patients fall into this type D category, linking stress with heart
disease.
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