Temporal associations of emotional and social loneliness and psychosocial functioning in emerging adulthood

Author:

Mobach Lynn12ORCID,Wolters Nine E.13,Klein Anke M.14,Koelen Jurrijn A.15ORCID,Vonk Peter3,van der Heijde Claudia M.3ORCID,Wuthrich Viviana M.6ORCID,Rapee Ronald M.6ORCID,Wiers Reinout W.17ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Developmental Psychology University of Amsterdam Amsterdam the Netherlands

2. Institute for Integrated Mental Health Care Pro Persona Nijmegen the Netherlands

3. General Practitioners Practice UvA‐HvA University of Amsterdam Amsterdam the Netherlands

4. Developmental and Educational Psychology Leiden University Leiden the Netherlands

5. Psychology, Health & Technology University of Twente Twente the Netherlands

6. Centre for Emotional Health Macquarie University Sydney Australia

7. Centre for Urban Mental Health University of Amsterdam Amsterdam the Netherlands

Abstract

Emerging adulthood is an important developmental phase often accompanied by peaks in loneliness, social anxiety, and depression. However, knowledge is lacking on how the relationships between emotional loneliness, social loneliness, social isolation, social anxiety and depression evolve over time. Gaining insight in these temporal relations is crucial for our understanding of how these problems arise and maintain each other across time. Young adults from a university sample (N = 1,357; M = 23.60 years, SD = 6.30) filled out questionnaires on emotional and social loneliness, social isolation, depressive and social anxiety symptoms at three time points within a 3‐year period. Random intercept cross‐lagged panel models were used to disentangle reciprocal and prospective associations of loneliness subtypes, social isolation, depressive and social anxiety symptoms across time. Results showed that on the within‐person level, increases in emotional and social loneliness as well as social isolation predicted higher depression levels on later timepoints. Increases in depressive symptoms also predicted increases in subsequent social loneliness, but not in emotional loneliness. Finally, increases in depressive symptoms predicted increases in social isolation. There were no significant temporal relations between loneliness and social isolation on the one hand and social anxiety symptoms on the other hand. Social distancing imposed by COVID‐19 related government restrictions may have impacted the current results. The findings suggest that emotional and social loneliness precede development of depressive symptoms, which in turn precedes development of social loneliness and social isolation, indicating a potential vicious cycle of social loneliness, social isolation and depressive symptoms in emerging adulthood. Social anxiety did not precede nor follow loneliness, depressive symptoms, or social isolation. The current study sheds more light on the temporal order of loneliness and psychopathological symptoms and hereby assists in identifying times where prevention and intervention efforts may be especially helpful to counter development of depression and loneliness.

Publisher

Wiley

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