Loneliness in Kenyan adolescents: Socio-cultural factors and network association with depression and anxiety symptoms.

Journal: Transcultural psychiatry

Volume: 59

Issue: 6

Year of Publication: 2022

Affiliated Institutions:  Department of Psychology, University of Michigan, MI, USA. Shamiri Institute, Pittsfield, MA, & Nairobi, Kenya. Department of Psychology, Harvard University, MI, USA.

Abstract summary 

Loneliness is associated with negative mental health outcomes and is particularly common among adolescents. Yet, little is known about the dynamics of adolescent loneliness in non-Western, low-income nations. Accordingly, we estimated the severity of loneliness in a sample of Kenyan adolescents and used mixed-effects regression modelling to determine the socio-cultural factors associated with loneliness. We also used network analysis to examine the associations between loneliness, depression, and anxiety at the symptom level. We analyzed data from a large sample (N = 2,192) of school-attending Kenyan adolescents aged 12-19 (58.3% female, 41.7% male). Standardized measures of loneliness (ULS-8), depression (PHQ-8), and anxiety (GAD-7) were used. Our mixed-effects model revealed that female and lower-income adolescents felt lonelier. The perception of feeling alone emerged as the aspect of loneliness most strongly linked to depression and anxiety symptoms. Our findings establish an estimate of loneliness levels in Kenyan adolescents, and identify possible socio-cultural factors associated with loneliness. We found that perceptions of isolation more strongly linked loneliness to psychopathology than did objective measures of isolation or preferences for social contact. Finally, we identify specific aspects of loneliness that could prove to be treatment targets for youth psychopathology; however, further research is needed. Limitations, future directions, and clinical implications are discussed.

Authors & Co-authors:  Rodriguez Osborn Gan Weisz Bellet

Study Outcome 

Source Link: Visit source

Statistics
Citations : 
Authors :  5
Identifiers
Doi : 10.1177/13634615221099143
SSN : 1461-7471
Study Population
Female
Mesh Terms
Adolescent
Other Terms
adolescents;anxiety;depression;loneliness;network analysis
Study Design
Study Approach
Country of Study
Kenya
Publication Country
England