Login / Signup

Loneliness and mental health in children and adolescents with pre-existing mental health problems: A rapid systematic review.

Emily HardsMaria Elizabeth LoadesNina Higson-SweeneyRoz ShafranTeona SerafimovaAmberley BrigdenShirley ReynoldsEsther M CrawleyEleanor ChatburnCatherine LinneyMegan McManusCatherine Borwick
Published in: The British journal of clinical psychology (2021)
Loneliness is common in children and young people, and during periods of enforced social isolation such as during COVID-19, children and young people report high levels of loneliness (or increased rates of loneliness). The review showed that loneliness is associated, both cross-sectionally and prospectively, in children and young people with mental health problems and also in children and young people with neurodevelopmental conditions, such as autism spectrum disorder. Thus, loneliness is a possible risk factor of which mental health providers should be aware. Maintaining social contact both by direct and by indirect means, especially through the Internet, could be important in mitigating loneliness. Interventions to address loneliness should be further developed and tested to help children and young people with pre-existing mental health problems who are lonely by preventing exacerbation of their mental health difficulties, in particular anxiety and depression.
Keyphrases