在 COVID-19 期间识别持续孤独青少年的特征:多国八波纵向研究

JCPP advances Pub Date : 2023-11-08 DOI:10.1002/jcv2.12206
Laura Riddleston, Meenakshi Shukla, Iris Lavi, Eloise Saglio, Delia Fuhrmann, Rakesh Pandey, Tushar Singh, Pamela Qualter, Jennifer Y. F. Lau
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摘要

背景 年轻人的孤独感很强。虽然这一成长阶段的孤独感可能源于社会关系中的典型年龄动荡,但关于青少年在多大程度上经历过高度和持续的孤独感,以及重要的是,哪些人最容易经历这些孤独感的数据却很少。COVID-19 大流行造成了广泛的社会限制,这加剧了许多人的孤独感,因此我们旨在研究青少年在不同时期的孤独感特征,以及更严重的孤独感轨迹的人口学预测因素(年龄、性别和国家)。 方法 我们在三个研究地点(英国、以色列和印度)进行了一项多波研究,招募了 12-18 岁的参与者(人数 = 1039),他们在大流行期间的 8 个时间点每两周完成一次 3 个项目的孤独感测量。 结果 潜在类增长分析显示出 5 种不同的轨迹:(1) 低度稳定(33%),(2) 低度增长(19%),(3) 中度下降(17%),(4) 中度稳定(23%),(5) 高度增长(8%)。女性和年龄较大的青少年更有可能经历持续的高度孤独感。 结论 这些研究结果表明,在大流行病肆虐之后,有必要采取干预措施来减少青少年的孤独感,尤其是那些被认为是高危人群的青少年。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

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Identifying characteristics of adolescents with persistent loneliness during COVID-19: A multi-country eight-wave longitudinal study

Background

Elevated loneliness experiences characterise young people. While loneliness at this developmental juncture may emerge from age-typical upheaval in social relationships, there is little data on the extent to which young people experience high and persistent levels of loneliness, and importantly, who is most vulnerable to these experiences. Using the widespread social restrictions associated with the COVID-19 pandemic, which precipitated loneliness in many, we aimed to examine adolescents' loneliness profiles across time and the demographic predictors (age, sex, and country) of more severe trajectories.

Methods

Participants aged 12–18 years, recruited into a multi-wave study (N = 1039) across three sites (UK, Israel, and India) completed a 3-item loneliness measure fortnightly across 8 timepoints during the pandemic.

Results

Latent class growth analysis suggested 5 distinct trajectories: (1) low stable (33%), (2) low increasing (19%), (3) moderate decreasing (17%), (4) moderate stable (23%), and (5) high increasing (8%). Females and older adolescents were more likely to experience persistently high loneliness.

Conclusions

These findings indicate a need for interventions to reduce loneliness in adolescents as we emerge from the pandemic, particularly for those groups identified as being at highest risk.

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