The silent epidemic of loneliness: identifying the antecedents of loneliness using a lagged exposure-wide approach.
Joanna H HongJulia S NakamuraSakshi S SahakariWilliam J ChopikKoichiro ShibaTyler J VanderWeeleEric S KimPublished in: Psychological medicine (2024)
Our findings suggest that subjective ratings of physical and psychological health and perceived social environment (e.g. chronic pain, self-rated health, purpose in life, anxiety, neighborhood cohesion) are more strongly associated with subsequent loneliness. Yet, objective ratings (e.g. specific chronic health conditions, living status) show less evidence of associations with subsequent loneliness. The current study identified potentially modifiable predictors of subsequent loneliness that may be important targets for interventions aimed at reducing loneliness.