Abstract

Loneliness is associated with adverse mental health outcomes in older adults. Bereavement triggers intense feelings of loneliness. This pilot study explored the association between baseline loneliness and grief symptom trajectories in bereaved elders and explored if this association is moderated by depressive symptom changes. 56 individuals aged 50 years and older, within 13-months following bereavement, completed assessments. Loneliness was measured at baseline using the UCLA loneliness scale-version 3. Grief and depressive symptoms were measured over 26 weeks using the inventory of complicated grief (ICG) and the 17-item Hamilton Depressive Rating (HAM-D) scales, respectively. Linear regression explored the cross-sectional association between loneliness and grief symptoms, after adjusting for covariates including depressive symptoms. A mixed-effects linear model tested whether baseline loneliness was related to grief symptom trajectory over 26 weeks, after accounting for depressive symptom changes. Loneliness was associated with grief symptom severity at baseline; however, this cross-sectional association was not significant after adjusting for depressive symptoms. Longitudinally, baseline loneliness was positively associated with grief symptom trajectories; however, depressive symptom changes moderated this association. Depressive symptom alterations appear to weaken the loneliness-grief symptom change association. These exploratory findings point to opportunities for interventions targeting loneliness and depression that may reduce grief intensity over time in bereaved elders.

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