Division of Psychiatry, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
The Loneliness and Social Isolation in Mental Health Research Network Co-Production Group, Division of Psychiatry, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2023 Mar 7;18(3):e0280946. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0280946. eCollection 2023.
Loneliness is associated with many mental health conditions, as both a potential causal and an exacerbating factor. Richer evidence about how people with mental health problems experience loneliness, and about what makes it more or less severe, is needed to underpin research on strategies to help address loneliness.
Our aim was to explore experiences of loneliness, as well as what helps address it, among a diverse sample of adults living with mental health problems in the UK. We recruited purposively via online networks and community organisations, with most interviews conducted during the COVID-19 pandemic. Qualitative semi-structured interviews were conducted with 59 consenting participants face-to-face, by video call or telephone. Researchers with relevant lived experience were involved at all stages, including design, data collection, analysis and writing up of results.
Analysis led to identification of four overarching themes: 1. What the word "lonely" meant to participants, 2. Connections between loneliness and mental health, 3. Contributory factors to continuing loneliness, 4. Ways of reducing loneliness. Central aspects of loneliness were lack of meaningful connections with others and lack of a sense of belonging to valued groups and communities. Some drivers of loneliness, such as losses and transitions, were universal, but specific links were also made between living with mental health problems and being lonely. These included direct effects of mental health symptoms, the need to withdraw to cope with mental health problems, and impacts of stigma and poverty.
The multiplicity of contributors to loneliness that we identified, and of potential strategies for reducing it, suggest that a variety of approaches are relevant to reducing loneliness among people with mental health problems, including peer support and supported self-help, psychological and social interventions, and strategies to facilitate change at community and societal levels. The views and experiences of adults living with mental health problems are a rich source for understanding why loneliness is frequent in this context and what may address it. Co-produced approaches to developing and testing approaches to loneliness interventions can draw on this experiential knowledge.
孤独与许多心理健康状况有关,既是潜在的因果因素,也是加剧因素。需要更多关于有心理健康问题的人如何体验孤独以及是什么使孤独更严重或更不严重的证据,以支持研究解决孤独感的策略。
我们的目的是探索英国患有心理健康问题的不同成年人样本中孤独感的体验,以及哪些因素有助于缓解孤独感。我们通过在线网络和社区组织有目的地招募参与者,大多数访谈是在 COVID-19 大流行期间进行的。研究人员与具有相关生活经验的人员一起参与了所有阶段,包括设计、数据收集、分析和结果报告。
分析导致确定了四个总体主题:1. 参与者对“孤独”一词的理解,2. 孤独与心理健康之间的联系,3. 导致孤独持续存在的因素,4. 减轻孤独的方法。孤独的核心方面是与他人缺乏有意义的联系,以及缺乏归属感和归属感。一些孤独的驱动因素是普遍存在的,例如损失和过渡,但也有人将心理健康问题与孤独感之间建立了具体的联系。这些包括心理健康症状的直接影响、为了应对心理健康问题而需要退出、以及耻辱感和贫困的影响。
我们确定的孤独的多重贡献因素以及潜在的减轻孤独感的策略表明,各种方法都与减轻有心理健康问题的人的孤独感有关,包括同伴支持和支持性自助、心理和社会干预,以及促进社区和社会层面变革的策略。患有心理健康问题的成年人的观点和经验是理解为什么这种情况下孤独感很常见以及什么可以缓解孤独感的丰富来源。共同制定解决孤独感干预措施的方法可以利用这种经验知识。