Journal
DEVELOPMENTAL REVIEW
Volume 60, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.dr.2021.100960
Keywords
Social connectedness; Mental disorder; Friendship; Loneliness; Early adolescents; Children
Categories
Funding
- Ludwig Boltzmann Gesellschaft and Karl Landsteiner University
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Social connectedness is crucial for the positive development of children and early adolescents, but those with mental disorders often experience difficulties in social connectivity. Research shows that social connectedness is significantly reduced in this population, with determinants including skills, behavior, social aspects, and symptoms.
Social connectedness (SC), as a sense of belonging and a psychological bond a person may feel towards other people or groups, is imperative for the positive mental and physical development of children and early adolescents. Particularly children and early adolescents with a mental disorder often face difficulties feeling socially connected and experience the detrimental effects of loneliness. The present systematic review aims to investigate how far SC differs in children and early adolescents with a mental disorder compared to in those that develop neurotypically. Furthermore, it aims to examine the determinants of SC and predominant SC measurement techniques applied in youth with a mental disorder. Following a systematic PRISMA approach, 33 studies were included. In the majority of studies, SC was reduced in the affected population, with varying manifestations over different diagnoses. Determinants could be divided into skills, behavioral and social aspects, and symptoms. Various measurement techniques were applied, exploring friendship quality, loneliness, and peer relations along several dimensions. Interventions and possibilities of influencing SC in certain disorders seems possible and necessary to bring SC more into the focus of daily clinical routine and prevent adverse outcomes in this vulnerable population.
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