4.2 Article

A Short-Form Measure of Loneliness to Predict Depression Symptoms Among Adolescents

Journal

CHILD PSYCHIATRY & HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
Volume 54, Issue 6, Pages 1760-1770

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10578-022-01370-3

Keywords

Loneliness; Depressive symptoms; Adolescents; Predicting

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The purpose of this study was to create a shorter measure of loneliness and examine its ability to predict depressive symptoms compared to a more comprehensive measure. The study found that the reduced six-item scale (PALs-6) showed strong prediction of very elevated depressive symptoms, but was less effective in predicting future symptoms.
The purpose of this study was to produce a short-form measure of loneliness and assesses its prediction of depressive symptoms relative to a comprehensive measure. Western Australian adolescents completed the Friendship Related Loneliness and Isolation subscales of the Perth Aloneness Scale (PALs) three times over 18 months (T 1 n = 1538; T 2, n = 1683; T 3, n = 1406). Items were reduced while preserving predictability. Follow-up confirmatory factor analyses and predictive models with the reduced and full PALs were then tested. A reduced six-item scale (PALs-6) preserved the two-factor structure of the PALs and showed strong prediction of very elevated depressive symptoms (Sensitivity = 0.70, Specificity = 0.78, AUC = 0.81); it was less successful in predicting future symptoms (Sensitivity = 0.67, Specificity = 0.64, AUC = 0.74). The PALs-6 provides a brief measure of adolescent loneliness for clinicians and researchers that also predicts very elevated levels of depression.

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