| Literature DB >> 30479424 |
Katarzyna Adamczyk1, Chris Segrin2.
Abstract
This study examined the indirect effects of relationship status (single vs. in a relationship) on life satisfaction through social and emotional (romantic and family) loneliness and perceived social support from significant others, family, and friends. Five hundred and fifty three Polish young adults (335 females and 218 males), ranging in age from 20-30 years (M = 23.42), completed the Polish versions of the Satisfaction With Life Scale, the Social and Emotional Loneliness Scale for Adults, and the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support. The results indicated that single individuals reported significantly lower satisfaction with life and social support from a significant other, but higher romantic and social loneliness, and higher family support compared to participants in a relationship. A path analysis revealed no direct effect of relationship status on satisfaction with life. However, there were significant indirect effects from relationship status to life satisfaction though romantic, family, and social loneliness, and through perceived social support from significant others and from family. Therefore, singlehood may be deleterious to life satisfaction because of the higher loneliness and lower social support from a significant other.Entities:
Keywords: Life satisfaction; Loneliness; Perceived social support; Relationship status; Young adults
Year: 2015 PMID: 30479424 PMCID: PMC5854170 DOI: 10.5334/pb.bn
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychol Belg ISSN: 0033-2879
Means and Standard Deviations of Life Satisfaction, Loneliness and Perceived Social Support by Relationship Status.
| Total sample | Single sample | Partnered sample | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variables | Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | ||
| Satisfaction with life | 21.68 (5.68) | 20.69 (5.54) | 22.27 (5.70) | 10.25** | .02 |
| Multivariate test | 190.05*** | .51 | |||
| Romantic loneliness | 13.61 (8.18) | 21.01 (6.14) | 9.19 (5.66) | 530.48*** | .49 |
| Family loneliness | 10.61 (5.39) | 11.18 (5.35) | 10.27 (5.39) | 3.74 | .01 |
| Social loneliness | 11.21 (5.18) | 10.60 (4.67) | 11.57 (5.44) | 4.58* | .01 |
| Multivariate test | 57.28*** | .24 | |||
| Significant other support | 19.19 (4.41) | 16.84 (4.89) | 20.60 (3.40) | 113.26*** | .17 |
| Family support | 17.43 (4.46) | 16.94 (4.55) | 17.72 (4.38) | 3.99* | .01 |
| Friends support | 17.67 (4.11) | 17.76 (4.02) | 17.62 (4.18) | .14 | .00 |
Note. * p < .05; ** p < .01; *** p < .001.
Figure 1Conceptual Depiction of Parallel Mediation Models.
Total, Direct, and Indirect Effects of Relationship Status on Life Satisfaction through Parallel Mediation Models for Loneliness and Perceived Social Support.
| Total effect | Direct effect | Total Indirect effect | Individual Indirect Effects | R2 for Model |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| −1.59** (0.50) | 0.26 (.063) | −1.84*** (0.54), | Romantic loneliness: | .23*** |
| −1.59** (0.50) | −0.49 (.063) | −1.09*** (0.34), | Significant Other support: | .20*** |
Note. Table values are unstandardized regression coefficient. Values between brackets are standardized errors. * p < .05, ** p < .01, *** p < .001.