Publication:
Understanding the protective effect of social support on depression symptomatology from a longitudinal network perspective

Thumbnail Image

Organizational Units

Program

KU-Authors

Acartürk, Ceren

KU Authors

Co-Authors

Li, Gen
Li, Yifan
Lam, Agnes Iok Fong
Tang, Weiming
Seedat, Soraya
Barbui, Corrado
Papola, Davide
Panter-Brick, Catherine
van der Waerden, Judith
Bryant, Richard

Advisor

Publication Date

Language

en

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Abstract

Background Higher social support protects people from developing mental disorders. Limited evidence is available on the mechanism through which social support plays this protective role. Objective To investigate the stress-buffering process of social support on depressive symptoms using a novel longitudinal dynamic symptom network approach. Methods A total of 4242 adult participants who completed the first two waves (from May to October 2020) of the International Covid Mental Health Survey were included in the study. Cross-lagged panel network modelling was used to estimate a longitudinal network of self-reported social support, loneliness and depressive symptoms. Standardised regression coefficients from regularised cross-lagged regressions were estimated as edge weights of the network. Findings The results support a unidirectional protective effect of social support on key depressive symptoms, partly mediated through loneliness: A higher number of close confidants and accessible practical help was associated with decreased anhedonia (weight=−0.033) and negative self-appraisal symptoms (weight=−0.038). Support from others was also negatively associated with loneliness, which in turn associated with decreased depressed mood (weight=0.086) and negative self-appraisal (weight=0.077). We identified a greater number of direct relationships from social support to depressive symptoms among men compared with women. Also, the edge weights from social support to depression were generally stronger in the men’s network. Conclusions Reductions in negative self-appraisal might function as a bridge between social support and other depressive symptoms, and, thus, it may have amplified the protective effect of social support. Men appear to benefit more from social support than women. Clinical implications Building community-based support networks to deliver practical support, and loneliness reduction components are critical for depression prevention interventions after stressful experiences.

Source:

BMJ Mental Health

Publisher:

BMJ Publishing Group

Keywords:

Subject

Psychiatry

Citation

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Copyrights Note

3

Views

4

Downloads

View PlumX Details