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A Meta-Analysis of Interventions to Reduce Loneliness:

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TLDR
An integrative meta-analysis of loneliness reduction interventions was conducted to quantify the effects of each strategy and to examine the potential role of moderator variables, and revealed that single-group pre-post and nonrandomized comparison studies yielded larger mean effect sizes relative to randomized comparison studies.
Abstract
Social and demographic trends are placing an increasing number of adults at risk for loneliness, an established risk factor for physical and mental illness. The growing costs of loneliness have led to a number of loneliness reduction interventions. Qualitative reviews have identified four primary intervention strategies: (a) improving social skills, (b) enhancing social support, (c) increasing opportunities for social contact, and (d) addressing maladaptive social cognition. An integrative meta-analysis of loneliness reduction interventions was conducted to quantify the effects of each strategy and to examine the potential role of moderator variables. Results revealed that single-group pre-post and nonrandomized comparison studies yielded larger mean effect sizes relative to randomized comparison studies. Among studies that used the latter design, the most successful interventions addressed maladaptive social cognition. This is consistent with current theories regarding loneliness and its etiology. Theoretical and methodological issues associated with designing new loneliness reduction interventions are discussed.

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Sleeping with one eye open: loneliness and sleep quality in young adults.

TL;DR: Loneliness is robustly associated with poorer sleep quality in young people, underscoring the importance of early interventions to mitigate the long-term outcomes of loneliness.
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GROUPS 4 HEALTH reduces loneliness and social anxiety in adults with psychological distress: Findings from a randomized controlled trial.

TL;DR: Findings suggest that G4H can be a useful way to treat loneliness and highlight the importance of attending to group memberships when tackling this important social challenge.
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Divorce and Health: Current Trends and Future Directions

TL;DR: What is known about the association between marital separation, divorce, and health outcomes is reviewed, and several candidate mechanisms and novel assessment techniques that may elucidate the poor outcomes among people who adapt poorly to separation are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Review: Alleviating loneliness in young people - a meta-analysis of interventions.

TL;DR: Evidence is found that youth loneliness could be reduced via intervention, and interventions should be designed specifically for loneliness, with universal programmes helping youth manage their transient feelings of loneliness, and targeted interventions for those suffering from chronic loneliness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Social media use, social anxiety, and loneliness: A systematic review

TL;DR: In this article, a systematic review examines social anxiety (SA) and loneliness (LO) in the context of social media use (SMU), with some findings suggesting that SMU is related to social anxiety and loneliness.
References
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The need to belong: Desire for interpersonal attachments as a fundamental human motivation.

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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors defined clinically significant change as the extent to which therapy moves someone outside the range of the dysfunctional population or within the ranges of the functional population, and proposed a reliable change index (RC) to determine whether the magnitude of change for a given client is statistically reliable.
Book

Practical Meta-Analysis

TL;DR: This paper presents a meta-analysis procedure called “Meta-Analysis Interpretation for Meta-Analysis Selecting, Computing and Coding the Effect Size Statistic and its applications to Data Management Analysis Issues and Strategies.
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