Loneliness and social anxiety in the general population over time : results of a cross-lagged panel analysis

ItemZeitschriftenaufsatzOpen Access

Abstract

Background: Loneliness has become a major public health issue of the recent decades due to its severe impact on health and mortality. Little is known about the relation between loneliness and social anxiety. This study aimed (1) to explore levels of loneliness and social anxiety in the general population, and (2) to assess whether and how loneliness affects symptoms of social anxiety and vice versa over a period of five years. Methods: The study combined data from the baseline assessment and the five-year follow-up of the population-based Gutenberg Health Study. Data of N = 15 010 participants at baseline (Mage = 55.01, s.d.age = 11.10) were analyzed. Multiple regression analyses with loneliness and symptoms of social anxiety at follow-up including sociodemographic, physical illnesses, and mental health indicators at baseline were used to test relevant covariates. Effects of loneliness on symptoms of social anxiety over five years and vice versa were analyzed by autoregressive cross-lagged structural equation

Description

Keywords

Citation

Published in

Psychological medicine, Version of Record (VoR), Cambridge Univ. Press, Cambridge, 2024, https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033291724001818

Relationships

Collections