| Literature DB >> 34831664 |
Lily Verity1, Tine Schellekens2, Tine Adam2, Floor Sillis2, Marinella Majorano3, Michael Wigelsworth1, Pamela Qualter1, Beth Peters1, Stephanie Stajniak1, Marlies Maes2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: loneliness is a common experience for adolescents, yet the voices of adolescents are missing from current conceptualisations of loneliness. That means, measures that have been created based on current conceptualisations may miss important contexts of adolescence, such as the roles of friendships, that determine the way loneliness is experienced. The current study aims to centre adolescent voices to identify how they conceptualise loneliness and what strategies they consider to be useful for adolescents to cope with loneliness.Entities:
Keywords: adolescence; loneliness; qualitative
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34831664 PMCID: PMC8621930 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph182211904
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Establishing connections between themes. The figure shows a concept map which illustrates how interpretations are linked together. The arrows show the directions in which the concepts impact upon each other; the different colors represent the themes to which the subthemes depicted belong.
Using thematic framework analysis (TFA) to analyse the interview data from Belgium and Italy.
| Stage | Description | Approach |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Transcription | Transcribing the audio recordings into text files. | Interviews were conducted in the interviewees own language (Dutch or Italian) and then transcribed. Those transcriptions were translated into English in order for the UK team to be involved in analysis. Idiosyncracies in translations were checked and corrected by members of the research team who spoke both English and Dutch or Italian. |
| 2. Familiarisation | A process of becoming familiar with the data set. | The UK team read and summarised all transcripts, including listing potential initial codes; the Belgian team did the same for the Belgian transcripts. Both teams came together to discuss that process and any initial patterns in the data. |
| 3. Open coding | Developing an initial set of codes to be trialled and refined. | The UK team created an initial chart of the data according to those potential codes identified through familiarisation and created a further refined list of codes based on that. The Belgian team continued the familiarisation process by rereading the transcripts and creating a separate list of initial codes. We then brought those codes together and refined both lists into one. |
| 4. Developing an analytical framework | Organising codes according to categories and trialling and redefining the organised coding framework until the coding framework reflects the whole data set. | The refined list produced from open coding was organised into a framework that grouped codes into categories collaboratively by the UK and Belgian teams. The framework was trialled independently by both teams on a selection of two transcripts, and then redefined to better suit the data based on the coders’ findings. That process was repeated three times until the framework was considered to reflect the dataset as a whole. |
| 5. Applying the analytical framework | Using the finalised analytical framework to code the dataset. | The finalised framework was applied to the dataset; the Belgian team coded the Belgian transcripts, and the UK team coded the Italian transcripts. The Belgian team coded the transcripts in Dutch for ease of understanding but used the English framework. The Italian transcripts were coded in English. |
| 6. Charting the data into a framework matrix | Inputting the coded data into a framework matrix that is organised by category and code for each participant. Coded data are inputted through a mixture of summarisation and direct quotations. | Data were input into an Excel file that was organised by participant, category and codes. Italian transcript data were input in English and Belgian transcript data were input in Dutch, and then translated to English to that the whole team could interpret the data. |
| 7. Interpreting the data | Developing a set of themes through identifying the salient issues covered in the data. | Both teams examined the framework matrix independently to create initial lists of potential themes by identifying salient issues that were evident in the data. Themes were discussed and continually reappraised alongside the coded data until they were considered to accurately depict the meaning relayed by the dataset as a whole whilst remaining interpretive as opposed to descriptive. |
Coding framework.
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| 1a. Imagining interactions that they are missing out on | Fantasising about fun they could have if they had friends, and what they might be missing out on |
| 1b. Considering how the future may look | Thinking about how the future might look for them, sometimes feeling that things might get better or feeling a lack of hope about their future |
| 1c. Thinking negatively about themselves | Blaming themselves for how they feel, or for not being able to join in with peers and make friends. This is where the interviewee notes that young people may think of themselves as responsible for their loneliness |
| 1d. Lack of trust in others | Finding it difficult to trust people enough to build connections |
| 1e. Attempting to think positively | Trying to think of happy situations in order to lift their negative mood |
| 1f. Thinking negatively about having less friends/confidants | Young people described how someone who is lonely may feel sad if they think that they have deficits in their relationships in comparison to their peers |
| 1g. Negative thoughts and feelings directed at peers | Directing negative emotions such as anger and jealousy, towards peers |
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| 2a. Emotions associated with loneliness | Emotions that young people use to describe the feelings of those experiencing loneliness |
| 2b. Bottling things up/not expressing self | Describing how someone feeling lonely keeps their emotions to themselves |
| 2c. Sensitive to negativity | Describing how someone feeling lonely may be more easily upset by things their peers say to them, or to fall outs and conflict than their peers who are not experiencing loneliness |
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| 3a. Spending time away from others | Describing how someone feeling lonely keeps themselves separate from others such as by sitting alone at playtimes |
| 3b. Has difficulty socialising | Describing how someone feeling lonely is seen to struggle connecting and building friendships with others. They might be seen as unusual to others and struggle with social skills, e.g., looking at people directly when talking to them, etc. |
| 3c. Enjoys being alone | Describing how someone who is feeling lonely may enjoy being alone |
| 3d. Searching for company | Describing how someone experiencing loneliness may spend time searching for friends |
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| 4a. Being bullied or picked on at school | Stating that being the victim of bullying is a situation where someone might feel lonely |
| 4b. Being excluded from socialising with peers | Being purposefully left out or avoided by peers stated as a reason why someone might feel lonely e.g., excluded from conversations, or games |
| 4c. Having no, or little, family | Feelings of loneliness at home being attributed to not having family members, or having few family members to spend time with, play with, or to provide support at home |
| 4d. Not having friends/being part of a group | Not having friends, or satisfying friendships as a reason for feeling lonely |
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| 4f. Loneliness takes place at school | Loneliness was discussed as taking place at school |
| 4g. Bereavement | Experiencing the passing of a family member, or someone close. |
| 4h. A lack of opportunity to engage in positive activities | Feeling lonely due to a lack of opportunities to socialise, or do the things you enjoy e.g., sports teams, afterschool classes, etc. |
| 4i. The influence of situational changes | Where loneliness is arises due to a change in circumstances such as parents going out and leaving them on their own, moving away, moving schools, friends moving away, etc. |
| 4j. Conflict with those close to them | Young people said that loneliness may occur when someone is in conflict with their family, or others who are close to them. |
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| 5a. Peers can approach first | Peers can help those who are feeling lonely by inviting them to talk or join in with games |
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| 5c. Teachers as problem solvers | Teachers can help lessen loneliness by giving advice on how to overcome issues with peers |
| 5d. Teachers encourage socialisation | Teachers can help lessen loneliness by providing opportunities for young people to make friends such as through group work or encouraging the class to let the person who experiencing loneliness join in |
| 5e. Parents provide comfort | Young people talk about how parents can lessen loneliness by providing hugs and a security |
| 5f. Parents provide encouragement | Parents can encourage young people to socialise with peers |
| 5g. Parents act as confidant | Young people talk about how they can confide in parents, or parents can encourage them to talk about their issues |
| 5h. Peers can provide opportunities to engage in positive activities | Where peers organise an event for those experiencing loneliness to attend. This is where rather than inviting someone to join in with an already existing activity they organise something specifically for that person for example taking them for a coffee |
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| 6a. Reaching out to others | Young people experiencing loneliness can approach others to and ask to talk, join in with games, for support, etc. |
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| 6c. Solitary activities | Young people experiencing loneliness can try to find activities to do alone that could make them feel better such as walking, cycling, playing video games, etc. |
| 6d. Ways to express self without the need for a confidant | Young people experiencing loneliness can find ways to express themselves that do not require someone else such as writing in a diary, talking to a teddy, etc. |
| 6e. Changing the way you act | Young people suggested a young person experiencing loneliness may benefit from changing the way they act in social situations, i.e., act in a more authentic way, try not to be too over the top, make more of an effort to engage with others |
| 6f. Barriers to engaging in coping strategies | Young people recognised that some individuals experiencing loneliness may find it difficult to cope. For example, reaching out to others and building friendships with others can take a long time, and/or be overwhelming for some |
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| 7a. Considering the type of loneliness that is worse to experience | Young people considered how individuals experiencing social, or emotional loneliness might feel, and if they thought it would be worse to be socially or emotionally lonely |
| 7b. Reasons why a type of loneliness seemed worse | Young people talked about the reasons why they were more concerned with experiencing a certain type of loneliness |
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| 8a. Gender differences in loneliness | Young people considered the ways boys and girls may experience loneliness |
| 8b. Difficulty recognising that loneliness is different to being alone | Some young people found it difficult to differentiate between loneliness and being alone. Code used to identify where difficulties are identified |
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Coping strategies that alleviate negative feelings according to gender.
| Codes | Male | Female |
|---|---|---|
| Confide in parents/family | 41.67%(5) | 33.33%(4) |
| Spend time alone | - | 8.33% |
| Isolate themselves | 16.67%(2) | 8.33%(1) |
| Write down thoughts/feelings/secrets | 25%(3) | 33.33%(4) |
| Talk to yourself | 16.67%(2) | 8.33%(1) |
| Talk to a toy | - | 8.33%(1) |
| Exercise | 8.33%(1) | - |
| Distracting activities 1 | 16.67%(2) | 16.67%(2) |
| Physical contact 2 |
1 For example: reading, using technology, completing homework, hobbies. 2 For example: hugs.
Coping strategies that aid social reconnection according to gender.
| Codes | Male | Female |
|---|---|---|
| Peers inclusion | 66.67%(8) | 88.33%(10) |
| Teachers offer help/encourage socialisation | 25%(3) | 41.67%(5) |
| Change one’s attitude/behaviour | 8.33%(1) | 16.67%(2) |
| Peers/adults give advice | 8.33%(1) | 16.67%(2) |
| Peers listen/talk | 50%(6) | 16.67%(2) |
| Peers organise social events | 8.33%(1) | 8.33%(1) |
| Ask to join in with peers | 25%(3) | 50%(6) |
| Find/make new friends | 41.67%(5) | 58.33%(7) |
| Be more sociable | 33.33%(4) | 58.33%(7) |
| Focus on existing friends | 16.67%(2) | - |
| Talk to/seek help from a professional | 16.67%(2) | - |
| Reach out for help from parents/family | 50%(6) | 41.67%(5) |
| Parents can provide help/support | 8.33%(1) | 25%(3) |
| Express feelings 1 | 8.33%(1) | -- |
1 For example: creating art to show an adult how you feel.
Type of loneliness according to age.
| Codes | 8–11 Years | 12–14 Years |
|---|---|---|
| Social loneliness is worst 1 | 66.67%(4) | 33.33%(2) |
| Emotional loneliness is worst 2 | 16.67%(1) | 66.67%(4) |
| Both equal/same | 16.67%(1) | - |
1 This refers to feeling lonely because you do not have anyone to play with. 2 This refers to feeling lonely because you do not have anyone to talk to or share secrets with.
Reasons for making choice of loneliness type.
| Codes | 8–11 Years | 12–14 Years |
|---|---|---|
| Prefer having people to play with over sharing secrets | 66.67%(4) | 16.67%(1) |
| Importance placed on talking | - | 66.67%(4) |
| Do not like sharing secrets | 16.67%(1) | - |
| Playing with others is harder than talking | - | 16.67%(1) |