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First published online July 29, 2020

Loneliness and Health: The Moderating Effect of Cross-Cultural Individualism/Collectivism

Abstract

Objectives: The adverse health effects of loneliness are well documented, but less is known about cultural moderators of this relationship. Contributing to the literature, we examined whether cross-cultural differences in individualism moderate the effect of loneliness on health. Methods: We used population-based longitudinal data of 14 countries (N = 40,797), as provided by the Survey of Health, Ageing, and Retirement in Europe data. Multilevel regression analyses were employed. Moderating effects were analyzed for multiple health outcomes: activities of daily living, instrumental activities of daily living, grip strength, life satisfaction, depression, memory performance, verbal fluency, and numeracy. Results: Cultural individualism significantly moderated the effect of loneliness on health regarding most health outcomes. In general, the effect of loneliness on health became stronger in less individualistic/more collectivistic countries. Discussion: Cultural individualism proved to be one important moderator of the loneliness–health relationship. As previous studies mostly used samples from highly individualistic countries, the current literature might severely underestimate the global public health burden of loneliness.

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Published In

Article first published online: July 29, 2020
Issue published: December 2020

Keywords

  1. loneliness
  2. collectivism
  3. individualism
  4. health
  5. cross-cultural

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PubMed: 32723203

Authors

Affiliations

Johannes Beller, MSc
Adina Wagner, MSc
Forschungszentrum Jülich GmbH, Julich, Germany

Notes

Johannes Beller, Hanover Medical School, Centre for Public Health and Healthcare, Medical Sociology, Carl-Neuberg-Straße 1, Deutschland, 30625 Hannover, Germany. Email: [email protected]
Johannes Beller and Adina Wagner contributed equally to this work

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