Latent Transition Analysis indicates four relatively stable profiles of loneliness in New Zealand

Abstract Objective: We investigated the characteristics of loneliness by identifying distinct ‘profiles’ of loneliness and investigating transitions between those loneliness profiles over two years. Method: We conducted Latent Transition Analyses on two years of data from the New Zealand Attitudes a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Matthew D. Hammond, Laura E. Goulden, Chris G. Sibley, Taciano L. Milfont
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2022-10-01
Series:Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/1753-6405.13262
_version_ 1797760777547939840
author Matthew D. Hammond
Laura E. Goulden
Chris G. Sibley
Taciano L. Milfont
author_facet Matthew D. Hammond
Laura E. Goulden
Chris G. Sibley
Taciano L. Milfont
author_sort Matthew D. Hammond
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Objective: We investigated the characteristics of loneliness by identifying distinct ‘profiles’ of loneliness and investigating transitions between those loneliness profiles over two years. Method: We conducted Latent Transition Analyses on two years of data from the New Zealand Attitudes and Values Study (N=15,820) and modelled how people's health and age were associated with changes in profile membership. Results: Four loneliness profiles emerged: ‘low‐loneliness’ (58% of the sample), ‘high‐loneliness’ (5%), ‘appreciated outsiders’ (28%; perceived acceptance from others but felt like social outsiders), and ‘superficially connected’ (9%; lacked acceptance from others but felt socially included). Profile membership was relatively stable over time and transitions were most likely from higher to lower loneliness. Younger people and people reporting poorer health were more likely to transition into profiles with greater loneliness indicators. Conclusions: Findings replicated a four‐profile pattern of loneliness, supported the theorised ‘trait‐like’ structure of loneliness and identified the possibility that moderate states of loneliness are transitional states into/from low and high loneliness. Implications for public health: The stability of loneliness across years reiterates the need for societal interventions, particularly interventions that are adaptive to whether people's loneliness forms as a lack of acceptance/value or a lack of social inclusion.
first_indexed 2024-03-12T19:03:27Z
format Article
id doaj.art-93d03a3c98bc409b9d30e91eb62c211b
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1326-0200
1753-6405
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-12T19:03:27Z
publishDate 2022-10-01
publisher Elsevier
record_format Article
series Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health
spelling doaj.art-93d03a3c98bc409b9d30e91eb62c211b2023-08-02T06:27:07ZengElsevierAustralian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health1326-02001753-64052022-10-0146565466010.1111/1753-6405.13262Latent Transition Analysis indicates four relatively stable profiles of loneliness in New ZealandMatthew D. Hammond0Laura E. Goulden1Chris G. Sibley2Taciano L. Milfont3School of Psychology Victoria University of Wellington New ZealandSchool of Psychology Victoria University of Wellington New ZealandSchool of Psychology University of Auckland New ZealandSchool of Psychology University of Waikato New ZealandAbstract Objective: We investigated the characteristics of loneliness by identifying distinct ‘profiles’ of loneliness and investigating transitions between those loneliness profiles over two years. Method: We conducted Latent Transition Analyses on two years of data from the New Zealand Attitudes and Values Study (N=15,820) and modelled how people's health and age were associated with changes in profile membership. Results: Four loneliness profiles emerged: ‘low‐loneliness’ (58% of the sample), ‘high‐loneliness’ (5%), ‘appreciated outsiders’ (28%; perceived acceptance from others but felt like social outsiders), and ‘superficially connected’ (9%; lacked acceptance from others but felt socially included). Profile membership was relatively stable over time and transitions were most likely from higher to lower loneliness. Younger people and people reporting poorer health were more likely to transition into profiles with greater loneliness indicators. Conclusions: Findings replicated a four‐profile pattern of loneliness, supported the theorised ‘trait‐like’ structure of loneliness and identified the possibility that moderate states of loneliness are transitional states into/from low and high loneliness. Implications for public health: The stability of loneliness across years reiterates the need for societal interventions, particularly interventions that are adaptive to whether people's loneliness forms as a lack of acceptance/value or a lack of social inclusion.https://doi.org/10.1111/1753-6405.13262belongingpsychological healthstatisticswellbeingsocial support
spellingShingle Matthew D. Hammond
Laura E. Goulden
Chris G. Sibley
Taciano L. Milfont
Latent Transition Analysis indicates four relatively stable profiles of loneliness in New Zealand
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health
belonging
psychological health
statistics
wellbeing
social support
title Latent Transition Analysis indicates four relatively stable profiles of loneliness in New Zealand
title_full Latent Transition Analysis indicates four relatively stable profiles of loneliness in New Zealand
title_fullStr Latent Transition Analysis indicates four relatively stable profiles of loneliness in New Zealand
title_full_unstemmed Latent Transition Analysis indicates four relatively stable profiles of loneliness in New Zealand
title_short Latent Transition Analysis indicates four relatively stable profiles of loneliness in New Zealand
title_sort latent transition analysis indicates four relatively stable profiles of loneliness in new zealand
topic belonging
psychological health
statistics
wellbeing
social support
url https://doi.org/10.1111/1753-6405.13262
work_keys_str_mv AT matthewdhammond latenttransitionanalysisindicatesfourrelativelystableprofilesoflonelinessinnewzealand
AT lauraegoulden latenttransitionanalysisindicatesfourrelativelystableprofilesoflonelinessinnewzealand
AT chrisgsibley latenttransitionanalysisindicatesfourrelativelystableprofilesoflonelinessinnewzealand
AT tacianolmilfont latenttransitionanalysisindicatesfourrelativelystableprofilesoflonelinessinnewzealand