Loneliness in young people: a multilevel exploration of social ecological influences and geographic variation

Author:

Marquez J1ORCID,Goodfellow C1ORCID,Hardoon D2,Inchley J1,Leyland A H1,Qualter P3,Simpson S A1,Long E1

Affiliation:

1. MRC/CSO Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G3 7HR UK

2. What Works Centre for Wellbeing, London SW1H 9EA, UK

3. University of Manchester, Manchester Institute of Education, Manchester M13 9PL, UK

Abstract

Abstract Background Loneliness is a growing public health concern, yet little is known about loneliness in young people. The current study aimed to identify social ecological factors related to loneliness and examine the extent to which geographic region may account for differences in loneliness. Methods The data come from a cross-sectional sample of 6503 young people living in the UK. Loneliness was measured using the UCLA 3-item scale. Bivariate analyses were used to test associations between each predictor and loneliness. Multilevel models were used to identify key social ecological factors related to loneliness, and the extent to which loneliness may vary across geographic regions (local authority districts). Results Sociodemographic, social, health and well-being, and community factors were found to be associated with loneliness. Geographic region was associated with 5–8% of the variation in loneliness. The effect of gender, sexual orientation and minority ethnic background on loneliness differed across regions. Conclusions This is the first study to highlight modifiable social and community factors related to youth loneliness, and individual vulnerabilities, such as poor mental well-being. Results related to geographic differences suggest that local-level initiatives may be most appropriate in tackling loneliness, rather than wider, less contextualized national efforts.

Funder

Economic and Social Research Council

Medical Research Council

Chief Scientist Office

MRC Skills Development Fellowship Award

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine

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