| Literature DB >> 34286652 |
R Nowland1, G Thomson2, L McNally2, T Smith2, K Whittaker2.
Abstract
AIMS: Chronic loneliness is experienced by around a third of parents, but there is no comprehensive review into how, why and which parents experience loneliness. This scoping review aimed to provide insight into what is already known about parental loneliness and give directions for further applied and methodological research.Entities:
Keywords: father; loneliness; mother; parental; parenthood; perceived social isolation
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34286652 PMCID: PMC8580382 DOI: 10.1177/17579139211018243
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Perspect Public Health ISSN: 1757-9147
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion | Exclusion | Search terms | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Population | Mothers, fathers, (biological or step parents), children 16 years and under and living in the family home | Non-parental caregivers (e.g. grandparents), pregnant women, adoptive/foster parents | mother* or maternal or parent* or father* or paternal |
| Exposure | Loneliness, perceived social isolation | Other mental health issues (e.g. depression) but do not explicitly refer to loneliness | Lonel* or ‘perceived social isolat*’ |
| Outcome | Experiences, attitudes and opinions of loneliness, prevalence of loneliness, impacts of parental loneliness on parent or child’s health and wellbeing | Studies that examine loneliness in child only, pregnancy, birth experiences | |
| Study types | All research study design | Books and book chapters, editorials, erratum, opinion pieces, conference abstracts, reviews, dissertations, protocols | |
| Language | English only | Non-English |
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram
Figure 2Category mapping of studies on parental loneliness
Other category includes sub-categories where there are two or less studies, which includes housing (n = 2), partner violence/abuse (n = 2), military wives (n = 1), specific work patterns (n = 2), parents with substance abuse (n = 2) and gender variant parents (n = 2).
Studies examining impacts of parental loneliness on child’s mental health and social competence
| Author | Year | Country | Child’s age | Design | Loneliness measure | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alvik
| 2014 | Norway | 6 months | Long | Single item measure | Mothers’ loneliness at 30 weeks in pregnancy predicted child’s low scores on problem-solving aspect of Ages and Stages Questionnaire at 6 months |
| Al-Yagon
| 2007 | Israel | 9–10 years | CS | ESL (mothers), LSDQ (child) | Mother’s loneliness associated with child’s internalising behaviours (not child’s loneliness), but when maternal resources included in analysis, mothers’ loneliness did not predict any child measures |
| Henwood and Solano
| 1994 | US | 6–7 years | CS | ABLS (parents), LSDQ (child) | Association between mothers and child’s loneliness, but not between fathers and their child’s loneliness |
| Junttila and Vauras
| 2009 | Finland | 10–11 years | Long | UCLA
| Mother’s and father’s loneliness predicted peer-evaluated cooperating skills of girls (but not boys), which predicted their social and emotional loneliness |
| Junttila et al.
| 2007 | Finland | 10–11 years | CS | UCLA (parents) PNDLS (child) | Association between high parental loneliness and low parenting self-efficacy. Parenting self-efficacy was related to children’s loneliness |
| Luoma et al.
| 2019 | Finland | 16–17 years | Long | Single item, ‘Do you feel lonely?’ | Mother’s prenatal loneliness predicted the child’s internalising problems in adolescence |
| Salo et al.
| 2020 | Turkey | 10–11 years | Long | UCLA (parents), PNDLS (child) | Long-term loneliness of sons was predicted by their father’s loneliness and daughters by mothers |
| Stednitz and Epkins
| 2006 | US | 9–12 years | CS | SELSA | Mother’s loneliness predicted girls’ self-reported social anxiety |
| Zafar Kausar
| 2015 | India | 13–17 years | CS | UCLA | Mothers’ high loneliness predicted adolescent’s lower social competence, hostility and fear of negative evaluation |
SELSA = Social and Emotional Scale for Adults ; SELSA-S = Social and Emotional Loneliness Scale for Adults ; PNDLS = Peer Network and Dyadic Loneliness Scale ; ABLS = Abbreviated Loneliness Scale ; ESL = Emotional and Social Loneliness ; LSDQ = Loneliness and Social Dissatisfaction Questionnaire.
Intervention studies measuring loneliness as an outcome
| Author | Year | Sample | Intervention | Country | Data collection waves | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| ||||||
| Chan | 2005 | New mothers (locality with high incidence of child abuse) | Home visiting peer support | China | Before receiving service and 1 year later | Loneliness reduced in the intervention group but not in the control group |
| Nystrom | 2006 | New mot hers | Telehealth, involving e-meeting forum with Health Care Professional | Sweden | Mothers reported having good social networks but spent most of the day alone with their children; meeting others in a similar situation made them feel less alone and friends were made in the group | |
| Richey et al.
| 1991 | Mothers at risk for child maltreatment | Interpersonal skills training | US | Pre- and post-training sessions | Slight decrease in loneliness was reported pre- and post-training (no statistical analysis conducted – only 6 mothers) |
| Skar | 2015 | New mothers | Child development parenting programme | Norway | Immediately after, 6–12 months after | Greater reduction in loneliness in the intervention group than the control group |
| Sorenson | 2003 | New mothers (traumatic childbirth provider interactions) | Short-term cognitive group therapy | US | Pre- and postintervention | Loneliness was reduced pre- to postintervention |
| Zare et al.
| 2017 | Mothers with children with CP | Self-management empowerment intervention | Iran | Pre- and postintervention | Intervention shows promise of reducing loneliness (independent |
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| Dennis et al.
| 2009 | New mothers (high postnatal depression) | Telephone peer support | Canada | Baseline, 12 weeks and 24 weeks | No difference in loneliness between intervention group and control group |
| Dennis
| 2003 | New mothers (high depression) | Peer support by lay volunteers | Canada | Baseline and 8 weeks later | No difference in loneliness between the control and intervention group |
| Hudson | 2012 | New mothers | Online discussion forum with Health Care Professional | US | 1 week, 6 weeks, 3 months and 6 months following birth | No differences across the intervention period in loneliness or differences between the intervention and control group |
| Razani et al.
| 2018 | Low-income parents | Park prescription | US | Baseline, 1 month and 3 months later | Reduction in loneliness in both groups from baseline and 3 months later, but no differences between the groups |
| Shorey | 2019 | New mothers at risk of postnatal depression | Technology-based peer-support | Singapore | 1 month and 3 months postpartum | No differences in loneliness scores and no difference in change in loneliness scores |
| Tuominen | 2016 | New mothers | Relational continuity of care | Finland | Relational continuity of care associated with higher levels of mothers’ emotional loneliness | |
| White | 1987 | Single parents | Peer support group | Australia | The old peer support and never had peer support groups were very similar on loneliness and new group reported higher levels of loneliness | |
| Yarnoz | 2008 | Divorced parents | Attachment-based intervention | Spain | Pre- and postintervention | No differences in loneliness pre- and postintervention |