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Journal of Adolescence

Publication date: 2013-01-01
Volume: 36 Pages: 1283 - 1293
Publisher: Elsevier

Author:

Qualter, P
Brown, SL ; Rotenberg, KJ ; Vanhalst, Janne ; Harris, RA ; Goossens, Luc ; Bangee, M ; Munn, P

Keywords:

Social Sciences, Psychology, Developmental, Psychology, Loneliness, Latent growth mixture modeling, Trajectories, Health, Temperament, Social acceptance, Sociability, Self-worth, Attribution, Trust beliefs, ATTENTION-DEFICIT/HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER, MIDDLE CHILDHOOD, SELF, TRUST, VICTIMIZATION, SUICIDALITY, ASSUMPTIONS, CHILDREN, Adolescent, Child, Confidence Intervals, England, Health Status, Humans, Models, Statistical, Odds Ratio, Personal Satisfaction, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Self Concept, Surveys and Questionnaires, 1701 Psychology, Developmental & Child Psychology, 5201 Applied and developmental psychology, 5203 Clinical and health psychology, 5205 Social and personality psychology

Abstract:

The present study employed latent growth mixture modeling to discern distinct trajectories of loneliness using data collected at 2-year intervals from age 7-17 years (N = 586) and examine whether measures taken at age 5 years were good predictors of group membership. Four loneliness trajectory classes were identified: (1) low stable (37% of the sample), (2) moderate decliners (23%), (3) moderate increasers (18%), and (4) relatively high stable (22%). Predictors at age 5 years for the high stable trajectory were low trust beliefs, low trusting, low peer acceptance, parent reported negative reactivity, an internalizing attribution style, low self-worth, and passivity during observed play. The model also included outcome variables. We found that both the high stable and moderate increasing trajectories were associated with depressive symptoms, a higher frequency of visits to the doctor, and lower perceived general health at age 17. We discuss implications of findings for future empirical work.