Loneliness and Emotional and Externalizing Problems in Early Adolescence: Moderating and Mediating Effects of Coping Skills

Sharmila Vaz, Reinie Cordier*, Annette Joosten, Mandie Shean, Robert Kane, Melissa H. Black, Karen Martin, Natasha Pearce, Kevin Runions

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Loneliness is an unavoidable facet of human existence. When chronic and intense, adolescent loneliness is associated with maladjustment over time. A prospective multiple-cohort study examined the links between child-reported loneliness and coping skills and parent-rated child mental health in early adolescence (aged 11.9 years at Time 1; 12.9 years at Time 2), with a total of 266 students from 75 primary and 152 secondary schools. Results indicated that (i) boys and girls did not differ in their levels of loneliness; (ii) boys reported poorer coping, fewer emotional problems, and more externalizing problems than girls; (iii) loneliness in primary school predicted increases in emotional and externalizing problems over time; (iv) problem-solving and non-productive coping mediated the associations between loneliness and emotional problems and externalizing problems; and (v) reference to others’ coping moderated the association between loneliness and emotional problems. Findings suggest that loneliness may potentially erode positive coping mechanisms over time. This study emphasizes the importance of understanding and addressing the impact of loneliness on early-adolescent mental health.
Original languageEnglish
Article number1192
Number of pages27
JournalBehavioral Sciences
Volume15
Issue number9
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 31 Aug 2025

Keywords

  • cope
  • mental health
  • youth
  • resilience
  • adolescent
  • school transition
  • social–emotional health
  • well-being

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