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The relationships between social support and loneliness: A meta-analysis and review

Journal

ACTA PSYCHOLOGICA
Volume 227, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.actpsy.2022.103616

Keywords

Social support; Loneliness; Meta-analysis; Mental health

Funding

  1. Jiangxi Provincial Key Research Base for Colleges'Humanities and Social Sciences [JD20061]

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The meta-analysis found a negative correlation between levels of social support and loneliness, with the relationship moderated by various variables. In Chinese samples, the association between loneliness and social support was stronger among rural populations compared to urban populations; perceived social support had a greater impact on loneliness compared to other forms of social support.
The loneliness of modern people is becoming more and more prominent, and has brought profoundly negative effects on mental health. Social support is an important predictor of loneliness. However, the size of the correlation reported by studies on the relation between social support and loneliness varies greatly. The aim of this meta-analysis is to determine the relation between social support and loneliness. One hundred and seventy-seven articles (N = 113,427) were identified, and robust variance estimation with random effects were used. As expected, higher levels of social support were negatively correlated with loneliness (r = -0.39). The association between social support and loneliness were also moderated by several variables. Specifically, the negative relationship between loneliness and social support among rural populations is stronger than that of urban populations in Chinese samples, the effect of perceived social support (r = -0.45) on loneliness is greater than that of other social supports (r = -0.36), and the friend support (r = -0.48) played a more important role in reducing loneliness than that of two other supports (family support: r = -0.34; significant other support: r = -0.40). The current results support robust links between social support and loneliness, emphasizing the important role of social support in reducing levels of loneliness, this may have some implications for future research and loneliness treatments.

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