| Literature DB >> 36228007 |
Priya J Wickramaratne1,2, Tenzin Yangchen2, Lauren Lepow3, Braja G Patra4, Benjamin Glicksburg3, Ardesheer Talati1,2, Prakash Adekkanattu5, Euijung Ryu6, Joanna M Biernacka6, Alexander Charney3, J John Mann7, Jyotishman Pathak4, Mark Olfson1, Myrna M Weissman1,2.
Abstract
Public health and epidemiologic research have established that social connectedness promotes overall health. Yet there have been no recent reviews of findings from research examining social connectedness as a determinant of mental health. The goal of this review was to evaluate recent longitudinal research probing the effects of social connectedness on depression and anxiety symptoms and diagnoses in the general population. A scoping review was performed of PubMed and PsychInfo databases from January 2015 to December 2021 following PRISMA-ScR guidelines using a defined search strategy. The search yielded 66 unique studies. In research with other than pregnant women, 83% (19 of 23) studies reported that social support benefited symptoms of depression with the remaining 17% (5 of 23) reporting minimal or no evidence that lower levels of social support predict depression at follow-up. In research with pregnant women, 83% (24 of 29 studies) found that low social support increased postpartum depressive symptoms. Among 8 of 9 studies that focused on loneliness, feeling lonely at baseline was related to adverse outcomes at follow-up including higher risks of major depressive disorder, depressive symptom severity, generalized anxiety disorder, and lower levels of physical activity. In 5 of 8 reports, smaller social network size predicted depressive symptoms or disorder at follow-up. In summary, most recent relevant longitudinal studies have demonstrated that social connectedness protects adults in the general population from depressive symptoms and disorders. The results, which were largely consistent across settings, exposure measures, and populations, support efforts to improve clinical detection of high-risk patients, including adults with low social support and elevated loneliness.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36228007 PMCID: PMC9560615 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0275004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.752
Fig 1PRISMA flow chart of the scoping review.
PRISMA diagram showing search and selection process of scoping review.
a. Characteristics of included studies on social support for nonpregnant samples.
b. Characteristics of included studies on social support for pregnant women.
| Reference | Sample/Setting [Country] | Study Type | Follow-up Times | Social | MH | Main Findings for Social Support |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Åhlin et al., 2018 [ | n = 6679 workers | Data from Swedish Longitudinal Occupational Survey of Health (SLOSH) | 6 waves | Workplace social support | Depressive symptoms | Perceiving low social support is associated with subsequent higher or increasing levels of depressive symptoms over time. |
| Ahmad et al., 2021 [ | n = 1924 refugees | Data from Syrian Refugee Integration and Long-term Health Outcomes in Canada study (SyRIA.lth) | 2 timepoints | Perceived social support | Depressive symptoms | One of the factors significantly associated with moderate- and severe-level of depression symptoms at year 2 was lower perceived social support. |
| Aroian et al., 2017 [ | n = 388 married Arab immigrant women | Longitudinal study | 3 waves roughly 18 months apart | Perceived social support | Depressive symptoms | An increased rate of change over time in friend support contributed to lower depression at Time 3, but changes over time in support from husband and support from family were not significant predictors of depression at Time 3. |
| Berthelsen et al., 2015 [ | n = 2059 nurses | One-year follow-up study | 2 timepoints | Social support [DCSQ] | Anxiety and depression symptoms [HADS] | Structural equation modeling revealed statistically significant reverse regression paths between baseline symptoms of anxiety and depression and follow-up role clarity, role conflict, fair leadership, and social support. |
| Billedo et al., 2019 [ | n = 98 international students from 76 host countries | Longitudinal study | 3 waves with 3-month intervals between each wave | Perceived social support | Depressive symptoms | Face to face interaction with the host-country network had immediate positive impacts on international students perceived social support, which in turn, predicted lower depressive symptoms |
| Boyden et al., 2020 [ | n = 200 parents of 158 seriously ill children | Prospective cohort study: Decision | 3 timepoints | Perceived social support | Prenatal anxiety | Cross-sectionally, social support scores were negatively associated with anxiety scores at each time point. Longitudinally, social support scores were associated with anxiety scores, although this association weakened in adjusted modeling. |
| Canavan et al., 2021 [ | n = 1474 participants | National longitudinal study: Americans’ Changing Lives (ACL) data set | 4 waves | Social support [3 standardized component indices that correspond to positive support from: spouse, child/children, | Depressive symptoms | Social support buffered the relationship between involuntary job loss and depressive symptoms among a subgroup of individuals who were more likely to be White, higher educated, and have higher social support before job loss. |
| Ciarleglio et al., 2018 [ | n = 375 active-duty veterans deployed to Iraq at least once between 2003 and 2005 | Longitudinal study: VA Cooperative Studies Program Study #566 (CSP#566) | 3 timepoints | Post-war-zone social support | Depression and anxiety severity | Higher scores on the post-deployment social support scale were associated with lower risk of all outcomes except problem drinking. Post-deployment social support remained a strong protective factor for PTSD, depression, and anxiety symptom severity at long-term follow-up. |
| Crowe et al., 2016 [ | n = 6521 participants in early twenties | Longitudinal study: Personality and Total Health (PATH) Through Life Project | 3 waves with 4-year intervals between each wave over 8-year period | Level of positive social support | Depressive symptoms | Social support, financial hardship, and a sense of personal control (mastery) all emerged as important mediators between unemployment and depression. |
| Feldman et al., 2021 [ | n = 135 emergency medical service providers | Longitudinal study | Baseline and 3-month follow-up | Perceived quality of relationships and support | PTSD | Lower social support and poor sleep hygiene at baseline predicted increases in depressive symptoms, PTSD symptoms, and anxiety symptoms at 3-month follow up. |
| Handley et al., 2019 [ | n = 2639 rural residents | Data from Australian Rural Mental Health Study | 4 timepoints | Perceived interpersonal support [Interview Schedule for Social Interaction] | Depression | The baseline-only model found that the odds of depression were increased for those who were permanently unable to work, had low perceived availability of interpersonal support, had a greater number of recent adverse life events, and had higher levels of neuroticism. |
| Haverfield et al., 2019 [ | n = 406 patients with co-occurring mental health and SUDs | Longitudinal study | 4 timepoints | Social support | Depression severity | Less family support (i.e., more conflict) was the most consistent predictor of mental health and substance use outcomes and was associated with greater psychiatric, depression, PTSD, and drug use severity. |
| Hayslip et al., 2015 [ | n = 86 grandparent caregivers | Longitudinal study | 2 timepoints over 1-year time frame | Perceived social support | Depressive symptoms | The interaction of overall health and social support at Time 1 predicted Time 2 depression. For those who lacked social support, overall health was negatively related to depression symptoms 1 year later. |
| Houtjes et al., 2017 [ | n = 277 older adults | Data of the Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam (LASA) | 16 timepoints/ | Social support | Depressive symptoms | A 2‐way interaction between depression course types and time showed significant differences in instrumental support received over time in older people with a late‐life depression. |
| Misawa et al., 2019 [ | n = 3464 elderly people | Longitudinal panel data: Part of Aichi Gerontological Evaluation Study (AGES) project | 2 waves. | Social support | Depression | The frequency of meeting with friends and self-rated health predicted reduced odds of depression in men, while age predicted increased odds in women. |
| Noteboom et al., 2016 [ | n = 1085 respondents from health care settings | Longitudinal cohort study: Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety (NESDA) | 2 timepoints | Social support | Depressive disorders [CIDI] | Contrary to authors’ expectations, low perceived support, or the perceived aspects (perceived emotional support or negative aspects of support) are not associated with the development of a new episode of depression after accounting for baseline clinical characteristics |
| Van Den Brink et al., 2018 [ | n = 1474 patients with MDD | Data from two cohort studies Sample1: NESDA | Social support received from partner and from closest friend or family member | Presence of | Negative experiences with social support were the only social relational variable, which independently predicted non-remission of depression at follow-up. | |
| Porter et al., 2017 [ | n = 343 undergraduates and their romantic partners | Longitudinal study | 2 timepoints | Perceived social support | Social anxiety | Social anxiety is not associated with less support as rated by observers. Socially anxious individuals received less support from their partners according to participant but not observer report. |
| Scardera et al., 2020 [ | n = 1174 emerging adults | Population-based cohort study: Data from Quebec Longitudinal Study of Child Development | 2 timepoints | Perceived social support | Depressive symptoms | Perceived social support was significantly associated with fewer depressive and anxiety symptoms, and suicide-related outcomes at 1-year follow-up. The magnitude of these associations appears stronger for depressive symptoms compared with anxiety symptoms. |
| Souto et al., 2021 [ | n = 15105 civil servants | Multicenter cohort: Longitudinal Study of Adult Health (ELSA-Brasil) | 2 waves | Social capital- resource available on social networks | Depressive episodes | Low social capital in the “social support” dimension was associated with the incidence of depressive episodes (RR = 1.66; 95% CI: 1.01–2.72) among men. Social support was associated with the maintenance of depressive episodes (RR = 2.66; 95% CI: 1.61–4.41) among women. |
| Stafford et al., 2019 [ | n = 7171 people aged 50 and older living in [England] | Data from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA) | 5 waves | Partner/spouse support | Depressive symptoms | Greater increases over time in depressive symptoms were seen in those with lower positive support at baseline. More baseline depressive symptoms predicted greater declines in positive support and greater increases in negative spousal support. |
| Steine et al., 2020 [ | n = 506 sexual abuse survivors | Data from the Longitudinal Investigation of Sexual Abuse (LISA) | 3 waves over 4-year period | Perceived social support | Anxiety and depression symptoms [HADS] | Cross-lagged panel analyses revealed significant weak reciprocal associations between perceived social support and depression, posttraumatic stress symptoms and anxiety symptoms, but not with insomnia symptoms. |
| Whitley et al., 2016 [ | n = 667 African American custodial grandmothers | Prospective study | 2 timepoints | Social support | Depression severity | Social support was a mediator in the association between depressive symptoms and mental health quality of life for older African American grandmothers (55+); however, this same relationship did not hold for their younger counterparts (≤55). |
| Zhou et al., 2020 [ | n = 1137 college freshmen [China] | Panel study | 3 waves with 1 month interval between each wave | Perceived Family Support | Depression severity | Family support in Wave 1 decreased compensatory social networking sites (SNS) use for less introverted freshmen in Wave 2 and further decreased depression in Wave 3. |
| Albuja et al., 2017 [ | n = 210 women from two clinics that provide prenatal care [Mexico] | Longitudinal study | T1: 3rd trimester | Social Support | Depressive symptoms | Lacking social support during the 3rd trimester of pregnancy was associated with greater depressive symptoms at 6 months in the postpartum, although this relationship depended on the level of endorsement of the traditional female role during pregnancy. |
| Asselmann et al., 2016 [ | n = 306 expectant mothers sampled from community in gynecological outpatient settings [Germany] | Prospective-longitudinal Maternal Anxiety in Relation to Infant Development (MARI) Study | T1: week 10–12 gestation | Perceived Social Support | Maternal depressive and anxiety disorders | Perceived social support declined from prepartum to postpartum; levels of prepartum and postpartum social support were lower in women with comorbid anxiety and depressive disorders compared to those with pure depressive disorder(s), pure anxiety disorder(s), or comorbid anxiety and depressive disorders prior to pregnancy. |
| Asselmann et al., 2020 [ | Depressive, anxiety, and stress symptoms | Peripartum depressive, anxiety, and stress symptoms were lower in women with higher perceived social support | ||||
| Cankorur et al., 2015 [ | n = 730 women from 20 urban and rural antenatal | Cohort study | T1: 3rdtrimester | Emotional, | Depressive symptoms | Worse emotional support from mother-in-law was significantly associated with postnatal depression incidence (OR = 0.93, 95% CI 0.87 to 0.99) and worse emotional support from husband with postnatal persistence (OR = 0.89, 95% CI 0.83 to 0.96) of antenatal depression. |
| Chen et al., 2016 [ | n = 203 South Asia immigrant mothers | Panel study | T1: 1 month postpartum | Emotional, instrumental, informational support | Depressive symptoms | Depression and instrumental support followed downward curvilinear trajectories, while emotional and informational support followed upward curvilinear trajectories. Emotional and instrumental support negatively covaried with postpartum depression over time, but not informational support. |
| Chen et al., 2020 [ | n = 407 immigrant and native-born women from obstetrical clinics and hospitals | Prospective study | T1: 2nd or 3rd trimester | Emotional, instrumental, informational support | Depressive symptoms | Social support was significantly and negatively associated with postpartum depressive symptoms in both immigrant and the native-born women, and presence of depressive symptomatology during pregnancy and a lower level of social support were associated with an increased depressive symptom score at 3 months postpartum. |
| Faleschini et al., 2020 [ | n = 1356 women from 8 obstetric offices | Data from Project Viva, a prospective observational cohort study | T1: trimester visits | Perceived social support | Depressive symptoms | Greater partner support and support from family/friends were strongly associated with lower odds of incident depression (OR 0.33, 95% CI [0.20, 0.55] and OR 0.49, 95% CI [0.30, 0.79]). |
| Gan et al., 2019 [ | n = 3310 women from antenatal clinics | Prospective study; Data from Shanghai Birth Cohort | T1: early pregnancy | Perceived social support | Postpartum depression | Significant associations between low perceived social support and postpartum depressive symptoms were found (Model I odds ratio: 1.63, 95% confidence interval: 1.15, 2.30; Model II odds ratio: 1.77, 95% confidence interval: 1.24–2.52). |
| Hagaman et al., 2021 [ | n = 780 women in rural area | Longitudinal data from the Bachpan Cohort | T1: 3 months postpartum | Social support | Major depressive disorder | High and sustained scores on the MSPSS through the perinatal period were associated with a decreased risk of depression at 12 months postpartum (0.35, 95% CI: 0.19 to 0.63). |
| Hare, 2020 [ | n = 144 women at risk for peripartum depression/ | Cohort study | T1 & T2: Twice antepartum | Perceived social support | Peripartum depression | Women diagnosed with PND experienced significantly worse mother–infant bonding and social support compared to HCW ( |
| Hetherington et al., 2018 [ | n = 3057 women [Canada] | Data from the All Our Families longitudinal pregnancy cohort | T1: 4 months postpartum | Support types: tangible, positive social interaction, and emotional/informational support. | Depressive or anxiety symptoms | Low total social support during pregnancy was associated with increased risk of depressive symptoms (RR 1.50, 95% CI 1.24 to 1.82) and anxiety symptoms (RR 1.63, 95% CI 1.38 to 1.93) at 4 months postpartum. Low total social support at 4 months was associated with increased risk of anxiety symptoms (RR 1.65, 95% CI 1.31 to 2.09) at 1 year. Emotional or informational support wan an important type of support for postpartum anxiety. |
| Leonard et al., 2020 [ | n = 1316 first time mothers [USA] | Longitudinal cohort study | 5 Time points: 1, 6, 12, 18, and 24 months postpartum | Perceived social support | Maternal postpartum depressive symptoms | Perceived social support decreased, perceived stress increased, and depressive symptoms remained constant from 1 to 18 months, then increased at 24 months. Low perceived social support predicted 6-month depressive symptoms, whereas perceived stress predicted depressive symptoms at all time points. |
| Li et al., 2017 [ | n = 240 pregnant women from the prenatal clinic at a general hospital | Longitudinal study | T1: late pregnancy | Perceived social support | Antepartum depression | Women who had higher Perceived Social Support Scale scores at late pregnancy had less likelihood of developing antepartum depression, and women with higher social support scores at postpartum week 4 were less likely to have postpartum depression. However, the Perceived Social Support Scale scores at late pregnancy did not predict the risk of postpartum depression. |
| Milgrom et al., 2019 [ | n = 54 women who met DSM-IV criteria of MDD or minor depression | Longitudinal follow-up of a previous RCT for antenatal depression | T1: baseline T2: 9 weeks post-randomization | Perceived social support | Depression | Two aspects of social support, reassurance of worth and reliable alliance, were strongly related to perinatal depression and anxiety, particularly when predicting symptoms in late pregnancy. However, the effect of postnatal depression on child development at 9- and 24-months post-birth was not mediated by social support. |
| Morikawa et al., 2015 [ | n = 877 women enrolled in a prepartum program during pregnancy | Cohort study | T1: before 25th week of gestation | Social support [SSQ] | Postpartum depression | Having a larger number of people available to provide social support during pregnancy has a greater protective effect on pregnant mothers with than without depression. |
| Nakamura et al., 2020 [ | n = 12386 couples | Data from the French representative ELFE (Etude Longitudinale Française depuis l’Enfance) cohort study | T1: at birth | Informal and formal support | Parental postnatal depression | Insufficient partner support as well as frequent quarrels during pregnancy predicted the odds of both parents being depressed. This association was higher for women with psychological difficulties during pregnancy than those without. An inverse association was also observed between psychosocial risk assessment attendance (informal support) and joint parental PPD, especially in couples in which the mother had psychological difficulties during pregnancy. |
| Ohara et al., 2017 [ | n = 494 pregnant women attending perinatal classes | Prospective cohort study | T1: early pregnancy before week 25 | Number of persons and satisfaction with social support | Postpartum depression | Satisfaction with the social support received during pregnancy did not directly predict depression in the postpartum period at a statistically significant level. However, poorer satisfaction with the social support received during pregnancy was a cause of depression in the postpartum period due to increased depression during pregnancy. |
| Ohara et al., 2018 [ | n = 855 pregnant women attending perinatal classes | Cohort study | T1: early pregnancy before week 25 | Number of persons and satisfaction with social support | Postpartum depression | Bonding failure in the postpartum period was significantly influenced by mothers’ own perceived rearing as well as social support during pregnancy. In addition, depression in the postpartum period was strongly influenced by social support during pregnancy. |
| Qu et al., 2021 [ | n = 66 pregnant women with a history of recurrent miscarriage | Prospective longitudinal study | 6–12, 20–24 and 32–36 gestational weeks | Perceived social support | Anxiety | Anxiety and depression were prevalent in pregnant women with a history of recurrent miscarriage, especially in early pregnancy with the lowest level of social support. The correlations among anxiety and social support, and depression and social support at each time point were significant ( |
| Racine et al., 2019 [ | n = 3388 mothers from community, laboratory, and health care clinic offices | Large, population-based cohort | T1: < 25 weeks gestation | Perceived social support: | Prenatal and postpartum anxiety | Women who experience heightened stress and anxiety in the perinatal period relative to their own average levels are at risk of higher anxiety and stress at subsequent time points; within-person increases in partner and friend support are salient predictors of subsequent decreases in both stress and anxiety; increases in stress and anxiety in the perinatal period are at risk of experiencing decreases in friend and family support. |
| Racine et al., 2020 [ | n = 1994 women from health care and laboratory offices [Canada] | Large, population-based cohort | T1: < 25 weeks gestation | Maternal social support | Maternal depression | Although maternal social support was a significant predictor of maternal depression across the perinatal period, social support did not moderate the association between ACEs and maternal depression. |
| Razurel et al., 2015 [ | n = 235 primiparous mothers [Switzerland] | Longitudinal study | T1: During the last month of pregnancy and T2: 6 weeks after birth | Satisfaction with social support | Depressive symptoms | Satisfaction with emotional support in T1 was negatively correlated with depressive symptoms in T1 and T2, which suggested that this type of support was important both in the short and the |
| Razurel et al., 2017 [ | T1: gestational weeks 37–41 T2: 2 days post-delivery | The more the women were provided with support from their partners, the less depressive symptoms and elevated levels of anxiety they reported, even under stressful conditions, while the satisfaction of support from their mothers boosted their sense of competency. Satisfaction with emotional support from professionals tempered the stress during the post-partum period (ΔR2 = 0.032; p < .05). | ||||
| Schwab-Reese et al., 2017 [ | n = 195 women from a large hospital | Longitudinal study | T1: following birth | Perceived social support | Depressive and anxiety symptoms | Current perceptions of social support were associated with depressive and anxiety symptoms at three-months postpartum, but social support was not protective against depressive or anxiety symptoms at six-months postpartum. |
| Senturk et al., 2017 [ | n = 730 women recruited in their third trimester | Cohort study | T1: 3rd trimester T2: 0.8–7.4 months after childbirth | Quality of relationships and social support | Postpartum depression | Self-rated emotional and practical support from all three relationships worsened over time in the cohort overall. Emotional support from the husband, and emotional and practical support from the mother-in-law declined more strongly in women with depressive symptoms at baseline |
| Tani et al., 2017 [ | n = 179 nulliparous pregnant women | Longitudinal study | T1: 31–32 week of pregnancy | Perceived social support | Postpartum depression | Post-partum depression was influenced negatively by maternal perceived social support and positively by negative clinical birth indices. In addition to these direct effects, analyses revealed a significant effect of maternal perceived social support on post-partum depression, mediated by the clinical indices considered. |
| Tsai et al., 2016 [ | n = 1238 pregnant in economically deprived settlements | Population-based longitudinal study | T1: 6 days after birth | Emotional and instrumental support | Depression symptom severity | Social support was found to be an effect modifier of the relationship between food insufficiency and depression symptom severity, consistent with the “buffering” hypothesis. Instrumental support provided buffering against the adverse impacts of food insufficiency while emotional support did not. |
| Yoruk et al., 2020 [ | n = 317 pregnant women at 38 weeks of gestation | Longitudinal study | T1: 4th week postpartum | Perceived social support | Postpartum depression | Despite the low level of perceived social support in the group at risk for PPD, this difference was not significant. |
| Yu et al., 2021 [ | n = 512 first-time mothers | Data from the National Data Archive on Child Abuse and Neglect | T1: 6-month postpartum | Social support | Depressive symptoms | Social support was not found to have a direct or indirect effect on postpartum depression/ |
| Zheng et al., 2018 [ | n = 420 Chinese primiparous women from obstetric wards at hospitals [China] | Longitudinal study | T1: 6 weeks postnatally | Emotional, material, informational, and evaluation of support | Postnatal depression symptoms [EPDS] | Postnatal depression symptoms and social support are the important influencing factors of maternal self-efficacy. The mean social support scores and scores of emotional support, informational support and evaluation of support had statistically significant increases over time. |
| Zhong et al., 2018 [ | n = 3336 women | Pregnancy Outcomes, Maternal and Infant Cohort Study | T1: <16 weeks | Satisfaction with social support and number of support providers | Depressive symptoms | Low number of support providers at both time points was associated with increased risk of depression (odds ratio = 1.62, 95% confidence interval: 1.12, 2.34). Depression risk was not significantly higher for women who reported high social support at one of the 2 time points. |
Checklist: BAI = Beck Anxiety Inventory; PCL-L = Civilian PTSD Checklist; BSI = Brief Symptom Inventory; CES-D = Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression Scale; CIDI = Composite International Diagnostic Interview; CIS-R = Clinical Interview Schedule–Revised; DASS = Depression Anxiety Stress Scale; DCSQ = Demand-Control-Support-Questionnaire; DRRI = Deployment Risk and Resilience Inventory; FSS = Family Support Scale; GAD = Generalized Anxiety Disorder; HADS = Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; IDS-SR = Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology Self-Report version; MINI: Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview; MSPSS = Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support; PHQ = Patient Health Questionnaire; SCL-CD6 = Symptom Checklist Core Depression Scale; SIAS = Social Interaction Anxiety Scale; SPS = Social Provisions Scale.
Checklist: BAI = Beck Anxiety Inventory; BDI = Beck Depression Inventory; CIDI = Composite International Diagnostic Interview for Women; CPQ = Close Persons Questionnaire DASS = Depression Anxiety Stress Scale; EPDS = Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale; ESSI = ENRICHD Social Support Instrument; F-SozU K-14 = Brief form of the Perceived Social Support Questionnaire; HAM-A = Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale; MOS-SSS = Medical Outcomes Study Social Support Survey; MSPSS = Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support; MSSI = Maternal Social Support Index; MSSS = Maternal Social Support Scale; PDPI-R = Postpartum Depression Predictors Inventory-Revised; PHQ = Patient Health Questionnaire; PSSQ = Postpartum Social Support Questionnaire; PSSS = Postpartum Social Support Scale; SCID = Structured Clinical Interview for DSM Disorders; SAS = Self-Rating Anxiety Scale; SOS = Significant Others Scale; SPS = Social Provisions Scale; SSI = Social Support Interview; SSQ = Social Support Questionnaire; STAI = Spielberger State Anxiety Scale.
Characteristics of included studies on social isolation.
| Reference | Sample/Setting | Study Type | Follow-up Times | Social Isolation | MH Outcome [Measure] | Main Findings for Social Isolation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Domènech-Abella et al., 2019 [ | n = 5066 adults | Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing (TILDA) | 2 waves of TILDA | UCLA Loneliness Scale | Major depressive disorder (MDD) or generalized anxiety disorder (GAD) | The longitudinal association between experiencing loneliness and higher likelihood of suffering from GAD two years later is bidirectional, whereas the association between social isolation and |
| Domènech-Abella et al., 2021 [ | n = 895 older adults | Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam (LASA) | 4 waves over 10 years | De Jong Gierveld Loneliness scale | Depressive symptoms | Loneliness was positively associated with depressive symptomatology, but not vice versa. |
| Evans et al., 2019 [ | n = 2135 elderly residents | Data from the Cognitive Function and Ageing Study–Wales (CFAS-Wales) | 2 timepoints | LSNS-6 | Depression and anxiety | Older people with depression or anxiety perceived themselves as more isolated than those without depression or anxiety, despite having an equivalent level of social contact with friends and family. In people with depression or anxiety, social isolation was associated with poor cognitive function at baseline, but not with cognitive change at 2-year follow-up. |
| Förster et al., 2021 [ | n = 679 elderly individuals | Longitudinal study AgeCoDe and its follow-up study AgeQualiDe | Data from follow-up 5 to follow-up 9 | LSNS-6 | Depression | “Widowed oldest old”, who are also at risk of social isolation, reported significantly more depressive symptoms in comparison to those without risk. |
| Herbolsheimer et al., 2018 [ | n = 334 community-dwelling older adults | Longitudinal study | 2 timepoints | LSNS-6 | Depressive symptoms | Being socially isolated was associated with lower levels of out-of-home physical activity, and this predicted more depressive symptoms after 3 years. However, no direct relationship was observed between social isolation from friends and neighbors at the baseline and depressive symptoms 3 years later. |
| Holvast et al., 2015 [ | n = 285 older adults | Multi-site prospective cohort study from the Netherlands Study of Depression in Older Persons (NESDO) | 2 timepoints | De Jong Gierveld Loneliness scale | Depression | Loneliness, subjective appraisal of social isolation, was a significant positive determinant of depressive symptom severity during follow-up. This association was independent of social network size and persisted after controlling for other potential confounders. |
| Lee et al., 2021 [ | n = 4211 adults | Data from English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA) | 7 waves collected once every 2 years between 2004 and 2017 | R-UCLA | Depressive symptoms | Loneliness, irrespective of other social experiences, was associated with a heightened risk of depression, and this risk persisted for up to 12 years after the loneliness was reported. |
| Martín-María et al., 2021 [ | n = 1190 older Spanish adults | Longitudinal study | Interviewed on 3 evaluations over a 7-year period | UCLA Loneliness Scale | Depression | Participants experiencing chronic loneliness were at a higher risk of presenting major depression (OR = 6.11; 95% CI = 2.62, 14.22) relative to those presenting transient loneliness (OR = 2.22; 95% CI = 1.19, 4.14). |
| Noguchi et al., 2021 [ | n = 3331 respondents | Data from | Followed up regarding | Modified | Depressive symptoms | Social isolation was significantly associated with depression |
Checklist: AGECAT = Automated Geriatric Examination; CIDI = Composite International Diagnostic Interview; GDS = Geriatric Depression Scale; HADS = Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; IDS-SR = Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology Self-Report version; LSNS = Lubben Social Network Scale; R-UCLA = Revision of the University of California, Los Angeles Loneliness Scale; SSI = Social Isolation Index.
Characteristics of included studies on social network.
| Reference | Sample/Setting | Study Type | Follow-up Times | Social Network [Measure] | MH Outcome [Measure] | Main Findings for Social Network |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baek et al., 2021 [ | n = 291 married couples | Korean Social Life, Health, and Aging Project (KSHAP) | 5 waves: 2011, 2012, 2014–15, 2015–16, 2018–19 | Fours questions in total about supportive relations and negative relations | Depressive symptoms | The association between husbands’ and wives’ depressive symptoms was stronger for couples that reported a low level of supportive marital relations, but only for the wife and those that reported a high level of negative marital relations for both the husband and wife. |
| Chang et al., 2016 [ | n = 21728 elderly women | Prospective cohort study: Nurses’ Health Study (NHS) | 5 timepoints, | Berkman-Syme Social Network Index | Depression | Social factors (lower social network; lower subjective social status; high caregiving burden to disabled/ill relatives) were associated with higher incident late-life depression risk in age-adjusted models. |
| Domènech-Abella et al., 2021 [ | n = 5066 older adults | Longitudinal Aging Study Amsterdam (LASA) | 4 waves over 10 years | Names of persons with whom they had regular contacts in the past year | Depressive symptoms | Decreasing social network size (Coef. = -0.02; p < 0.05), predicted higher levels of loneliness, which predicted an increase in depressive symptoms (Coef. = 0.17; p < 0.05) and further reduction of social network (Coef. = -0.20; p < 0.05). |
| Domènech-Abella et al., 2019 [ | n = 5066 adults | Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing (TILDA) | 2 waves of TILDA | Berkman-Syme Social Network Index | MDD or GAD | Both objective social isolation (size of social network) and loneliness factors have been found to be robust risk factors for depression and anxiety independently, which acts as a warning not to underestimate the subjective aspects of social isolation. |
| Förster et al., 2018 [ | n = 783 elderly people | Population-based cohort study: Leipzig Longitudinal Study of the Aged (LEILA) | 3 timepoints | PANT | Depressive symptoms | Persons with a restricted social network were more likely to develop depression, and risk of depression was particularly high for elderly with social loss experiences. |
| Noteboom et al., 2016 [ | n = 1085 respondents from health care settings | Longitudinal cohort study: Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety (NESDA) | 2 timepoints | Questions on how many relatives, friends or others over the age of 18 years they had regular and important contact | Depressive disorders [CIDI] | Structural (network size and partner status) did not predict depression at follow up. Pariticipants with a lifetime history of depression reported a smaller social network. |
| Van Den Brink et al., 2018 [ | n = 1474 patients with a major depressive disorder | Data from 2 cohort studies NESDA and Netherlands Study of Depression in Older Persons (NESDO) | Questions on social network characteristics | Presence of | Social network characteristics, such as having a partner and number of persons in one’s household, are related to depression course. | |
| Reynolds et al., 2020 [ | n = 3005 elderly people | Panel data from National Social Life, Health, and Aging Project (NSHAP) | 3 waves | Questions on community-layer, interpersonal-layer, and partner-layer connection | Depressive symptoms | Results demonstrate multiple links between social connection and depression, and that the evolution of social networks in older adults is complex, with distinct mechanisms leading to positive and negative outcomes. Specifically, community involvement showed consistent benefits in reducing depression. |
| Santini et al., 2020 [ | Social Disconnectedness Scale | Depressive symptoms | Perceived isolation was positively associated with depression symptoms at T2 and T3 (β = 0·12; p<0·0001). | |||
| Santini et al., 2021 [ | n = 38300 adults | Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe (SHARE) | 2 consecutive waves (2011, 2013) of the SHARE survey | The total number of close relations in the social network | Depressive symptoms | Social participation among people with relatively few close social ties was negatively associated with depression symptoms but did not seem to benefit to those with relatively many close social ties. |
Checklist: CES-D = Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression Scale; CES-D-ML = Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression Minus Loneliness Scale; CIDI = Composite International Diagnostic Interview; GAD = Generalized Anxiety Disorder; GDS = Geriatric Depression Scale; HADS = Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; IDS-SR = Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology Self-Report version; MDD = Major Depressive Disorder; MHI-5 = Mental Health Index-5.