Do Social Support and Loneliness Influence Emerging Adults’ Mental Health during the First Year of the COVID-19 Pandemic?

Author:

Jensen-Campbell Lauri A.1,Liegey Dougall Angela1ORCID,Heller Abigail C.2,Iyer-Eimerbrink Priya3,Bland Michelle K.1,Hull Kristen1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, TX 76019, USA

2. Department of Psychology, Belmont University, Nashville, TN 37212, USA

3. Department of Psychology, University of North Texas at Dallas, Dallas, TX 75241, USA

Abstract

Youths’ mental health is at a crisis level, with mental health problems doubling in the US since the pandemic began. To compound the mental health crisis, there is a global loneliness epidemic, with emerging adults worldwide experiencing some of the highest rates. One study with two phases examined the influence of social support and loneliness on mental health in US emerging adults during the pandemic, including changes in these relationships over one year. Emerging adults (N = 449) completed online questionnaires via Prolific in May 2020 (Phase 1) and again from January to May 2021 (N = 253; Phase 2). More perceived support was related to reduced loneliness, with family support having the most significant influence. Loneliness mediated the link between perceived support and adverse health outcomes. Higher loneliness predicted more perceived stress and sleep difficulties concurrently and over time. There was a bidirectional relationship between loneliness and depression, such that higher levels of either variable at Time 1 predicted increases in the other over time. Results highlight the detrimental impact of loneliness on emerging adults’ mental health.

Funder

Department of Psychology

Honors College at UTA

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Neuroscience

Reference139 articles.

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