Associations of loneliness, belongingness and health behaviors with psychological distress and wellbeing during COVID-19
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Authors
McCallum, Sonia
Calear, Alison
Cherbuin, Nicolas
Farrer, Lou
Gulliver, Amelia
Shou, Yiyun
Dawel, Amy
Batterham, Philip
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Elsevier
Abstract
Background: The aim of this study was to assess the effects of loneliness, belongingness and other modifiable
factors on psychological distress and wellbeing and whether the effects of COVID-19 modulated these
relationships.
Methods: The current study reported on 1217 participants aged 18 years or older who completed an online
survey from 28 to 31 March 2020. Survey measures included demographic characteristics; exposure to COVID-
19; impact of COVID-19 on employment, finance, and work and social adjustment; loneliness, thwarted
belongingness, and health behavior changes as modifiable factors. Outcome measures were psychological
distress and wellbeing.
Results: Linear regression models revealed that COVID-19 related work and social adjustment difficulties,
financial distress, loneliness, thwarted belongingness, eating a less healthy diet poorer sleep and being female
were all associated with increased psychological distress and reduced wellbeing (p < 0.05). Psychological distress
was more elevated for those with high difficulties adjusting to COVID-19 and high levels of thwarted belong-
ingness (p < 0.005). Similarly, as COVID-19 related work and social adjustment difficulties increased, wellbeing
reduced. This was more pronounced in those who felt lower levels of loneliness (p < 0.0001). Other interactions
between COVID-19 impacts were observed with gender and poorer diet for psychological distress and cigarette
use, age and gender for wellbeing (p < 0.05).
Limitations: The study was cross-sectional, preventing causal interpretation of the relationships.
Conclusion: Modifiable factors, age and gender had significant impacts on psychological distress and wellbeing.
Public health and policy approaches to improving social, economic and lifestyle factors may mitigate the
negative mental health effects of the pandemic and its restrictions.
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Journal of Affective Disorders
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Open Access
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Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License
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