| Literature DB >> 29843662 |
Jingyi Wang1, Farhana Mann1, Brynmor Lloyd-Evans1, Ruimin Ma1, Sonia Johnson2,3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The adverse effects of loneliness and of poor perceived social support on physical health and mortality are established, but no systematic synthesis is available of their relationship with the outcomes of mental health problems over time. In this systematic review, we aim to examine the evidence on whether loneliness and closely related concepts predict poor outcomes among adults with mental health problems.Entities:
Keywords: Loneliness; Mental health problems; Outcomes; Perceived social support; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29843662 PMCID: PMC5975705 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-018-1736-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Fig. 1Studies selection flowchart
Summary of characteristics of included studies
| Condition studied | Predictor variable | Outcomes | Sample size range (median) | Length of follow-upa | Follow-up rate range (median) | Quality score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Depression ( | Perceived social support ( | Symptom severity ( | 66–604 (239) | Short ( | 60.6–100% (81.9%) | **** ( |
| Schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorders ( | Perceived social support ( | Functional outcomes ( | 139–148 (143.5) | Medium ( | 71.9–100% (86.0%) | *** ( |
| Bipolar disorder ( | Perceived social support ( | Symptom severity ( | 42–173 (55.5) | Short ( | 71.1–100% (86.4%) | *** ( |
| Anxiety disorders ( | Perceived social support ( | Symptom severity ( | 134–1004 (1004) | Short ( | 80–87% (81.0%) | **** ( |
| Mixed samples with various mental health problems (n = 2) | Perceived social support ( | Symptom severity ( | 352–743 (547.5) | Medium ( | 79.9–84.4% (82.2%) | *** ( |
aLength of follow-up: Short = < 1 year; Medium = 1–2 years; Long = > 2 years. ** = two criteria of MMAT met. *** = three criteria of MMAT met. **** = all criteria of MMAT met
Summary of findings on depression
| Reference | Predictor variable | Outcome variable | Results (++ < 0·05 adjusted; + < 0·05 unadjusted; − non-significant) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hybels et al. (2016) [ | Perceived social support | Trajectory class (quick recovery, slow recovery, persistent moderate, and persistent high) | ++ | Patients in the persistent moderate depression class had lower levels of baseline subjective social support compared with patients in the quick recovery class (OR (95%CI) = 0.91 (0.83, 0.98)). Patients in the persistent high depression class had lower levels of baseline subjective social support compared with those in the quick recovery class (OR (95%CI) = 0.83 (0.75, 0.92)) |
| Holvast et al. (2015) [ | Loneliness | Symptom severity; | ++ | In the fully adjusted model, a 1-point higher baseline loneliness score predicted a 0·61-point higher depressive symptom severity score at follow-up (Beta = 0.61, 95% CI 0.12–1.11, |
| Holma et al. (2012) [ | Perceived social support | Disability pensions | + | Lower perceived social support at baseline predicted greater likelihood of being granted a disability pension over 5 year follow-up on univariate analysis ( |
| Backs-Dermott et al. (2010) [ | Perceived social support | Relapse versus stable remitted | ++ | Lower perceived social support from a significant other (standardized discriminant function coefficient 0.48) and lower perceived social support from friends (standardized coefficient 0.35) at baseline predicted greater likelihood of depressive relapse at one-year follow-up. The Discriminant Function Analysis was significant, Wilk’s Lambda = 0.69, x2 (5) = 16.35, |
| Bosworth et al. (2008) [ | Perceived social support | Depression severity | ++ | Poorer subjective social support was a significant predictor of more severe depression at 12 months. Standardized beta = − 0.13, |
| Rytsala et al. (2007) [ | Perceived social support | Work disability allowances | + | Lower perceived social support at 6 month was a significant predictor of greater likelihood of being granted disability allowances at 18 months (F = 6.3, |
| Rytsala et al. (2006) [ | Perceived social support | Functional disability; | ++ | Lower perceived social support at baseline was a significant predictor of more severe functional disability at 6 months (B = 0.232, |
| Leskela et al. (2006) [ | Perceived social support | Severity of depression | + | Lower perceived social support at 6 months predicted more severe depression at 18 months in original zero-order correlation ( |
| Steffens et al. (2005) [ | Perceived social support | Severity of depression | ++ | Lower subjective social support at baseline predicted more severe depression over time (estimate − 0.5641, |
| Ezquiaga et al. (2004) [ | Perceived social support | Episode remission | – | Higher perceived social support at baseline did not predict remission at 12 months in univariate analysis ( |
| Reference | Predictor variable | Outcome variable | Results (++ < 0·05 adjusted; + < 0·05 unadjusted; − non-significant) | |
| Gasto et al. (2003) [ | Perceived social support | Severity of residual symptoms | ++ | Lower subjective social support at baseline predicted higher intensity of residual symptoms at 9 months in remitters (standardized β = 0.41, |
| Bosworth et al. (2002) [ | Perceived social support | Time-to-remission | ++ | Lower subjective social support at baseline (Hazard Ratio = 0.47, 95% CI: 0.31–0.71, |
| Bosworth et al. (2002) [ | Perceived social support | Remission | ++ | Lower baseline levels of subjective social support (OR = 1.21, 95% CI: 1.09–1.35, |
| Triesch (2002) [ | Perceived social support | Severity of depressive symptoms; | − | Lower perceived social support at baseline did not predict more severe depression (β = − 0.17) or poorer quality of life (β = − 0.12) at 3 months |
| Hays et al. (2001) [ | Perceived social support | Activities of daily living | ++ | There was modest support for hypothesis that baseline subjective social support predicted functional declines at 1 year. There was partial support for hypothesis that the buffering effects of social support against functional decline would be strongest among the most severely depressed patients |
| Oxman and Hull (2001) [ | Perceived social support | Depression severity | ++ | Greater perceived social support predicted subsequent decreases in depression among participants randomly assigned to placebo group (6-week depression − 0.18, |
| Brummett et al. (2000) [ | Perceived social support | Depressive symptoms | – | Higher levels of received support at baseline significantly predicted decreases in depressive symptoms at both 6 months and 1 year, whereas subjective support did not significantly predict changes in depressive symptoms at either point in time |
| Sherbourne et al. (1995) [ | Perceived social support | Number of depressive symptoms | ++ | Decreased number of depressive symptoms between baseline and 2-year follow-up was predicted by social support at baseline (standardised regression coefficients = 0.12, zero-order Pearson product-moment correlations = 0.16, |
| Blazer et al. (1992) [ | Perceived social support | Decreased life satisfaction symptoms; | ++ | Impaired subjective support at baseline was predictive of poorer outcome at 12-month follow-up in both models: decreased life satisfaction symptoms (b = 0.10, B = 0.37, |
| Blazer et al. (1991) [ | Perceived social support | Depressive symptoms | + | Intercorrelation between social support at baseline and depression score at 6 months: − 0.41, |
| Brugha et al. (1990) [ | Perceived social support | Symptom severity | ++ | After controlling for the two significant clinical predictors, a significant main effect was found in total sample for lower satisfaction with support at baseline on more severe psychiatric status at 4 months (regression coefficient = − 1.46, |
| George et al. (1989) [ | Perceived social support | Depressive symptoms | ++ | Impaired subjective social support at baseline is a significant predictor of higher numbers of CES-D symptoms at follow-up (b = 8.88, B = 0.20, |
| Krantz and Moos (1988) [ | Perceived social support | Remitted, partially remitted, and nonremitted | + | Lower quality of relationships at baseline predicted poorer remission status after 1 year (χ2 = 10.21, |
Summary of findings on schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorders
| Reference | Predictor variable | Outcome variable | Results (++ < 0·05 adjusted; + < 0·05 unadjusted; − non-significant) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ritsner et al. (2006) [ | Perceived social support | Quality of life | ++ | Higher friend support at baseline predicted better satisfaction with life quality after 16 months (accounted for 2.9% of quality of life index scores at follow up examination) |
| Brekke et al. (2005) [ | Perceived social support | Global functional outcome (work, social functioning, and independent living); | − | Higher social support did not significantly predict better global functional outcome at 12 months ( |
Summary of findings on bipolar disorder
| Reference | Predictor variable | Outcome variable | Results (++ < 0·05 adjusted; + < 0·05 unadjusted; − non-significant) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Koenders et al. (2015) [ | Perceived social support | Depressive symptomatology; | ++ | Lower perceived support predicted more depression related functional impairment during the subsequent 3 months ( |
| − | ||||
| Cohen et al. (2004) [ | Perceived social support | Recurrence | ++ | After controlling for clinical variables, lower social support of any kind significantly predicted recurrence of any type at one year (β (SE) = − 0.09 (0.04), |
| Daniels (2000) [ | Perceived social support | Depressive symptomatology; | ++ | Lower perceived support was a significant predictor of more severe depressive symptomatology after controlling for initial levels of depression (R2 = 0.67, F = 34.15, ΔR2 = 0.05, ΔF = 5.24, beta = − 0.25). Lower perceived support significantly predicted more severe manic symptomatology over three months (R2 = 0.18, F = 3.74, ΔR2 = 0.10, ΔF = 4.18, beta = − 0.32). Lower perceived social support significantly predicted impairment in functioning in the participants who completed their life charts for 90 consecutive days, after controlling for initial levels of functional impairment (R2 = 0.44, F = 5.48, ΔR2 = 0.41, ΔF = 10.22, beta = − 0.67). |
| Johnson et al. (1999) [ | Perceived social support | Time to recovery; | ++ | Lower social support was a significant predictor of longer time to recovery in Cox regression survival analyses (χ2 (1, |
Summary of findings on anxiety disorders
| Reference | Predictor variable | Outcome variable | Results (++ < 0·05 adjusted; + < 0·05 unadjusted; − non-significant) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jakubovski and Bloch (2016) [ | Perceived social support | Remission; | ++ | Generalised anxiety disorder: Greater amount of social support predicted a higher rate of remission (OR = 1.38, 95% CI Wald 1.09–1.75, |
| Shrestha et al. (2015) [ | Perceived social support | Quality of life | ++ | Main effect of social support was significant such that those with higher baseline social support reported higher average quality of life over time (b (SE) = 0.41 (0.08), |
| Dour et al. (2014) [ | Perceived social support | Anxiety symptoms; | ++ | Direct effects: Relations between perceived social support and depression were bidirectional at all follow-ups, whereas they were unidirectional between perceived social support and anxiety at 6- and 12-month follow-ups. Indirect effects: Intervention led to changes in 6- and/or 12-month perceived social support, that in turn led to subsequent changes in 18-month depression ( |
Summary of findings on mixed samples with various mental health problems
| Reference | Predictor variable | Outcome variable | Results (++ < 0·05 adjusted; + < 0·05 unadjusted; − non-significant) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fleury et al. (2013) [ | Perceived social support | Subjective quality of life | ++ | Social support variables at baseline accounted for 7.9% of quality of life at 18-month follow-up. Among social support dimensions, higher perception of availability of social integration (β = 0.196, |
| Van Beljouw et al. (2010) [ | Loneliness | Severity of depression; | ++ | A higher symptom severity in depression at 1-year follow-up was predicted by more loneliness at baseline in both multilevel univariate linear regression analyses (β = 0.89, SE = 0.17, |