Halidu Malik Dimbei, Moe Cathrine Fredriksen, Behboudi-Gandevani Samira, Haugan Tommy
Faculty of Nursing and Health Science, Nord University, Levanger, Norway.
Faculty of Nursing and Health Science, Nord University, Bodø, Norway.
Front Public Health. 2024 Dec 24;12:1484501. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2024.1484501. eCollection 2024.
Social anxiety can make significant life transitions from adolescence to young adulthood particularly stressful. Despite the potential impact, few population-based longitudinal studies have examined the relationship between social anxiety and the timing of key markers of the transition to adulthood. This study investigated the association between social anxiety and the timing of two critical life events: first leaving the parental home and first living with a partner.
Data were drawn from 8,199 adolescents aged 13-19 who participated in the Young-HUNT3 survey (2006-2008) in Norway, linked with event registration data from Statistics Norway through 2020. Social anxiety was assessed via the Short Form of the Social Phobia and Anxiety Inventory for Children, with scores ranging from 1 to 5. Accelerated failure time (AFT) regression analyses with a Weibull distribution were conducted to evaluate the relationship between social anxiety and the timing of first leaving the parental home and first living with a partner.
The final analytic sample size was 8,045. The median age for first leaving the parental home was 21, whereas the median age for first starting to live with a partner was 24. Higher levels of social anxiety were modestly associated with delays in both life transitions. Specifically, a one-unit increase in the social anxiety score was associated with an approximate one-month delay in leaving the parental home ( = 1.005; < 0.05) and a two-month delay in first living with a partner ( = 1.010; < 0.001). The predicted mean indicates a difference of 4 months for leaving the parental home and 8 months for first living with a partner, comparing adolescents with the lowest (score of 1) to the highest (score of 5) within the social anxiety spectrum.
This study highlights the association between social anxiety and delays in key life transitions from adolescence to early adulthood. Despite these delays, socially anxious adolescents in Norway appear to reach these milestones-leaving the parental home and living with a partner-in their early twenties, similar to their peers. Although the findings are modest, practically, this information may still hold significant value in informing care providers and policymakers to focus on adolescents as a potential period for implementing evidence-based programs aimed at social anxiety. Future research should explore other stress-inducing life events and examine the long-term socioeconomic and health outcomes of adolescents with social anxiety.
社交焦虑会使从青春期到青年期的重大生活转变压力倍增。尽管有潜在影响,但很少有基于人群的纵向研究考察社交焦虑与成年过渡关键标志时间之间的关系。本研究调查了社交焦虑与两个关键生活事件时间之间的关联:首次离开父母家以及首次与伴侣同居。
数据来自8199名年龄在13 - 19岁的青少年,他们参与了挪威的Young - HUNT3调查(2006 - 2008年),并与挪威统计局截至2020年的事件登记数据相链接。通过儿童社交恐惧症和焦虑量表简版评估社交焦虑,得分范围为1至5分。采用威布尔分布的加速失效时间(AFT)回归分析来评估社交焦虑与首次离开父母家以及首次与伴侣同居时间之间的关系。
最终分析样本量为8045。首次离开父母家的中位年龄为21岁,而首次开始与伴侣同居的中位年龄为24岁。社交焦虑水平较高与这两个生活转变的延迟均有适度关联。具体而言,社交焦虑得分每增加一个单位,离开父母家的时间延迟约一个月(β = 1.005;P < 0.05),首次与伴侣同居的时间延迟两个月(β = 1.010;P < 0.001)。预测均值表明,在社交焦虑谱中,得分最低(1分)与最高(5分)的青少年相比,离开父母家的时间差为4个月,首次与伴侣同居的时间差为8个月。
本研究凸显了社交焦虑与从青春期到成年早期关键生活转变延迟之间的关联。尽管有这些延迟,但挪威社交焦虑的青少年似乎在二十出头时达到这些里程碑——离开父母家并与伴侣同居,与同龄人相似。尽管研究结果不太显著,但实际上,这些信息对于告知护理人员和政策制定者将青少年作为实施针对社交焦虑的循证项目的潜在时期可能仍具有重要价值。未来的研究应探索其他引发压力的生活事件,并考察社交焦虑青少年的长期社会经济和健康结果。