No Substitute for In-Person Interaction: Changing Modes of Social Contact during the Coronavirus Pandemic and Effects on the Mental Health of Adults in the UK

Author:

Rouxel Patrick1ORCID,Chandola Tarani2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

2. University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong & University of Manchester, UK

Abstract

Life-course theories on how social relationships affect mental health are limited in causal claims. The restrictions in social contact during the coronavirus pandemic provided a natural experiment that modified the frequency of in-person contact and allowed us to estimate the effect of changes in in-person social contact frequency on mental health in four large nationally representative age-cohorts of adults living in the UK. There was consistent evidence of a small but statistically significant effect of less frequent social contact on anxiety-depression. Online modes of social contact did not compensate for the restrictions in in-person social contact during the pandemic. Young adults who increased their online social media frequency during the pandemic experienced a deterioration in mental health. Life-course theories cannot ignore the importance of the mode of social contact for social relationships, especially during young adulthood.

Funder

Economic and Social Research Council

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Sociology and Political Science

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