4.7 Article

Age differences in the association between loneliness and anxiety symptoms during the COVID-19 pandemic

Journal

PSYCHIATRY RESEARCH
Volume 310, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.psychres.2022.114446

Keywords

Loneliness; Anxiety; Mental health; Psychiatry; COVID-19; Public health

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Loneliness and associated mental health problems are a major concern during the COVID-19 pandemic due to physical distancing and lockdown restrictions. This study aimed to examine whether the association between loneliness and anxiety differed by age and/or gender. The results showed that age significantly moderated the association, while gender did not. Loneliness was associated with anxiety symptoms for all age groups, but the association was weaker among those aged 70+ years.
Loneliness and associated mental health problems are of particular concern during the COVID-19 pandemic due to physical distancing and lockdown restrictions. Loneliness is most common among young adults and women during the pandemic, but it is unclear if the association between loneliness and mental health problems, notably anxiety, is strongest in these groups. The objective of this study was to examine whether the association between loneliness and anxiety differed by age and/or gender during the pandemic. We analyzed data from a multi-wave national online survey of Canadians aged 18+ years from May 2020 to March 2021 (n = 7,021). Multivariable modified least-squares regression was used to examine whether the association between loneliness and moderate to severe anxiety symptoms (GAD-7 10+) differed by age and/or gender on the additive scale, controlling for socio-demographic factors, depression, hopefulness, and survey wave. Age significantly moderated the association between loneliness and anxiety symptoms while gender did not. Loneliness was associated with anxiety symptoms for all age groups, but the association was not as strong among those aged 70+ years compared to other age groups. Evidence-based loneliness interventions that target younger adults are needed to mitigate the mental health effects of infectious disease events such as COVID-19.

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