丧偶后孤独感和社会隔离感的发展:鳏寡纵向研究的系统回顾。

Kerri Niino, Molly A Patapoff, Brent T Mausbach, Hui Liu, Alison A Moore, Benjamin H Han, Barton W Palmer, Dylan J Jester
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摘要

背景:丧偶是一个充满压力的生活事件,它与孤独和社会隔离有关,而孤独和社会隔离都会影响身心健康。本文的主要目的是综述有关丧偶后孤独感和社会隔离的纵向研究:方法:使用三个电子数据库对文献进行了系统检索。纳入了截至 2024 年 6 月发表的 26 项纵向研究进行进一步分析。提取了参与者特征、研究设计和主要发现:大多数研究来自美国或欧洲,纳入的寡妇多于鳏夫,并对年龄大于 60 岁的老年人的孤独感进行了评估。孤独感在配偶去世后直接达到顶峰,但关于丧偶的持久影响,研究结果并不一致。研究发现,孤独感的纵向轨迹存在异质性,随着时间的推移,研究结果显示孤独感呈直线上升、下降或曲线关系。一些因素改变了丧偶与孤独之间的关系,包括志愿服务、从军经历、收入和年龄。与鳏夫相比,鳏夫一直报告说他们更孤独,社会隔离也更严重。很少有研究对社会隔离进行了专门调查,但调查发现,社会隔离可能会随着丧偶而减少:结论:当全世界都在努力应对孤独和社会隔离的社会流行病时,丧偶成年人可能会受到独特的影响。很少有研究对丧偶后的孤独感,尤其是社会隔离感的纵向轨迹进行调查,而那些调查的结果也不尽相同。我们需要在今后的工作中了解为什么有些丧偶成年人会受到孤独感和社会孤立感的独特影响,而另一些人则不会,以及社会心理干预是否可以利用潜在的可调节因素来缓和或调解这种关系。
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Development of loneliness and social isolation after spousal loss: A systematic review of longitudinal studies on widowhood.

Background: Spousal loss is a stressful life event that is associated with loneliness and social isolation, both of which affect mental and physical health. The primary objective of this paper was to synthesize longitudinal studies that investigated loneliness and social isolation in widowhood.

Methods: A systematic search of the literature was conducted using three electronic databases. 26 longitudinal studies published through June 2024 were included for further analysis. Participant characteristics, study design, and key findings were extracted.

Results: Most studies were from the United States or Europe, included more widows than widowers, and assessed loneliness in older adults aged >60 years. Loneliness peaked directly following spousal death, but findings were inconsistent regarding the lasting effects of widowhood. Heterogeneity in the longitudinal trajectories of loneliness was noted, with studies showing linear increases, decreases, or curvilinear relationships over time. Several factors modified the relationship between widowhood and loneliness, including volunteerism, military experience, income, and age. Widowers consistently reported greater loneliness and worse social isolation when compared with widows. Few studies investigated social isolation specifically, but those that did found that social isolation may decrease in widowhood.

Conclusions: As the world grapples with a social pandemic of loneliness and social isolation, widowed adults may be uniquely affected. Few studies investigated the longitudinal trajectory of loneliness and especially social isolation in widowhood, and those that did found heterogenous results. Future work is needed to understand why some widowed adults are uniquely affected by feelings of loneliness and social isolation while others are not, and whether potentially modifiable factors that moderate or mediate this relationship could be leveraged by psychosocial interventions.

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