Abstract

BackgroundThis study investigated prospective relations between loneliness in family, romantic and social relationships and common mental health problems measured as symptoms of anxiety and depression. How these relations are mediated by metacognitive beliefs and worry in a serial mediation model in a full SEM was also tested. Materials and methodsData were collected at two time points, separated by three months among students at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. In total, 241 (Females = 65%) students completing both waves of data collection were included for analyses. ResultsLoneliness in family relationships was only concurrently associated with worry whereas loneliness in social and romantic relationships showed concurrent and prospective relations. Overall, the results highlighted that for loneliness in social and romantic relationships, their prospective relations with anxiety and depressive symptoms depended on how an individual responded with metacognitive beliefs or worry or both. However, social loneliness might be an exception since it also had a direct effect on levels of depressive symptoms. ConclusionsTo prevent or reduce loneliness and common mental health problems, evidence provided show that interventions may incorporate components that target self-focused negative thinking in the form of worry or beliefs about the contents of negative thinking in the form of metacognitive beliefs, underlying loneliness and mental health problems.

Highlights

  • Among the general population in some developed countries the feeling of loneliness is rapidly increasing with deleterious mental health effects

  • The present study investigated how loneliness in different relationships prospectively relates to symptoms of anxiety and depression through metacognitive beliefs and worry

  • The overarching aim in this study was to investigate whether metacognitive beliefs contribute to worry as serial mediators in the prospective relationships between loneliness in family, romantic and social relationships and common mental health measured as anxiety and depressive symptoms

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Summary

Introduction

Among the general population in some developed countries the feeling of loneliness is rapidly increasing with deleterious mental health effects. The present study investigated how loneliness in different relationships prospectively relates to symptoms of anxiety and depression through metacognitive beliefs and worry. This study investigated prospective relations between loneliness in family, romantic and social relationships and common mental health problems measured as symptoms of anxiety and depression. How these relations are mediated by metacognitive beliefs and worry in a serial mediation model in a full SEM was tested. The results highlighted that for loneliness in social and romantic relationships, their prospective relations with anxiety and depressive symptoms depended on how an individual responded with metacognitive beliefs or worry or both. Conclusions: To prevent or reduce loneliness and common mental health problems, evidence provided show that interventions may incorporate components that target self-focused negative thinking in the form of worry or beliefs about the contents of negative thinking in the form of metacognitive beliefs, underlying loneliness and mental health problems

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