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The effects of loneliness on depressive symptoms among older adults during COVID-19: longitudinal analyses of the Canadian longitudinal study on aging

Faculty Advisor

Date

2023

Keywords

loneliness, depression, COVID-19, CLSA

Abstract (summary)

Objectives: This paper examines the longitudinal effects of changes in the association between loneliness and depressive symptoms during the pandemic among older adults (65+). Methods Baseline (2011–2015) and Follow-up 1 (2015–2018) from the Canadian Longitudinal Study on Aging (CLSA), and the Baseline and Exit waves of the CLSA COVID-19 study (April–December, 2020) (n = 12,469) were used. Loneliness was measured using the 3-item UCLA Loneliness Scale and depression using the CES_D- 9. Results Loneliness is associated with depressive symptoms pre-pandemic; and changes in level of loneliness between FUP1 and the COVID Exit survey, adjusting for covariates. No interaction between loneliness and caregiving, and with multimorbidity, on depressive symptoms were observed, and several covariates exhibited associations with depressive symptoms. Discussion Strong support is found for an association between loneliness on depressive symptoms among older adults during the pandemic. Public health approaches addressing loneliness could reduce the burden of depression on older populations.

Publication Information

Wister, A., Li, L., Levasseur, M., Kadowaki, L., & Pickering, J. (2023). The effects of loneliness on depressive symptoms among older adults during COVID-19: Longitudinal analyses of the Canadian longitudinal study on aging. Journal of Aging and Health, 35(5-6), 439-452. https://doi.org/10.1177/08982643221129686

Notes

Item Type

Article

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Rights

Attribution-NonCommercial (CC BY-NC)