Abstract

Loneliness is a common and debilitating problem in individuals with mental health disorders. However, our knowledge on severity of loneliness in different mental health diagnostic groups and factors associated with loneliness is poor, thus limiting the ability to target and improve loneliness interventions. The current study investigated the association between diagnoses and loneliness and explored whether psychological and social factors were related to loneliness. This study employed a cross-sectional design using data from a completed study which developed a measure of social inclusion. It included 192 participants from secondary, specialist mental health services with a primary diagnosis of psychotic disorders (n=106), common mental disorders (n=49), or personality disorders (n=37). The study explored differences in loneliness between these broad diagnostic groups, and the relationship to loneliness of: affective symptoms, social isolation, perceived discrimination, and internalized stigma. The study adhered to the STROBE checklist for observational research. People with common mental disorders (MD=3.94, CI=2.15 to 5.72, P<0.001) and people with personality disorders (MD=4.96, CI=2.88 to 7.05, P<0.001) reported higher levels of loneliness compared to people with psychosis. These differences remained significant after adjustment for all psychological and social variables. Perceived discrimination and internalized stigma were also independently associated with loneliness and substantially contributed to a final explanatory model. The severity of loneliness varies between different mental health diagnostic groups. Both people with common mental disorders and personality disorders reported higher levels of loneliness than people with psychosis. Addressing perceived mental health discrimination and stigma may help to reduce loneliness.

Highlights

  • Loneliness has become an increasingly studied topic in the general population and recently in mental illnesses

  • Our study addresses gaps in knowledge by (a) investigating whether severity of loneliness varies in people using secondary mental health services in different mental health diagnostic groups, (b) whether social and psychological factors might contribute to differences between these diagnostic groups in levels of loneliness, and (c) whether diagnosis, affective symptoms, social isolation, perceived discrimination, and internalized stigma are independently associated with loneliness

  • In comparison with other diagnostic groups, participants from the psychosis group mostly comprised of males and Black and Minority Ethnic (BME) groups

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Summary

Introduction

Loneliness has become an increasingly studied topic in the general population and recently in mental illnesses. Loneliness is a subjective experience where individuals feel a discrepancy between social relationships that they desire to have and what they have (Perlman & Peplau, 1981). It is an unpleasant feeling linked with lack of quality relationships (Perlman & Peplau, 1982). Within the general population of the United Kingdom, 22% of women and 18% of men reported feelings of loneliness at any given time (Griffin, 2010).

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