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Health and wellbeing outcomes associated with loneliness for people with disability: a scoping review

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Health and wellbeing outcomes associated with loneliness for people with disability: a scoping review. / Bailie, Jodie; Bishop, Glenda M.; Badland, Hannah et al.
In: BMC Public Health, Vol. 23, No. 1, 2361, 29.11.2023.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Bailie, J, Bishop, GM, Badland, H, Emerson, E, Aitken, Z, Stancliffe, R, Ekanayake, K & Llewellyn, G 2023, 'Health and wellbeing outcomes associated with loneliness for people with disability: a scoping review', BMC Public Health, vol. 23, no. 1, 2361. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-023-17101-9

APA

Bailie, J., Bishop, G. M., Badland, H., Emerson, E., Aitken, Z., Stancliffe, R., Ekanayake, K., & Llewellyn, G. (2023). Health and wellbeing outcomes associated with loneliness for people with disability: a scoping review. BMC Public Health, 23(1), Article 2361. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-023-17101-9

Vancouver

Bailie J, Bishop GM, Badland H, Emerson E, Aitken Z, Stancliffe R et al. Health and wellbeing outcomes associated with loneliness for people with disability: a scoping review. BMC Public Health. 2023 Nov 29;23(1):2361. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-17101-9

Author

Bailie, Jodie ; Bishop, Glenda M. ; Badland, Hannah et al. / Health and wellbeing outcomes associated with loneliness for people with disability: a scoping review. In: BMC Public Health. 2023 ; Vol. 23, No. 1.

Bibtex

@article{df9ee34edb794726a803d66b8e7f168a,
title = "Health and wellbeing outcomes associated with loneliness for people with disability: a scoping review",
abstract = "Background: Loneliness is a significant public health concern due to its detrimental impact on health and wellbeing. Despite people with disability reporting higher levels of loneliness than the general population, there has been little research into how this is affecting their health and wellbeing. In light of this, the aim of our study was to scope both the existing evidence about the health and wellbeing outcomes associated with loneliness for people with disability, as well as the conceptual frameworks and measures utilised in this field of research. Methods: To conduct this scoping review, we followed the methodology outlined by JBI and searched MEDLINE, Scopus, Informit, Embase, and Web of Science for peer-reviewed, English-language articles published between 1 January 2000 and 8 February 2023. Two independent reviewers completed screening, full-text review and data extraction, with consensus sought at each stage. Data were analysed using content analysis and presented both numerically and narratively. Results: Out of the initial 1602 publications identified in the scoping review, only nine were included after duplicate removal, title and abstract screening, and full-text review. This limited number of studies, with the earliest study one published in 2015, represents a key finding. Eight of the nine studies were quantitative, and all were conducted in high income countries. Most of these studies utilised a version of the University of Los Angles Loneliness Scale to measure loneliness and addressed specific impairment groups. Notably, most of the studies identified associations between loneliness and health and wellbeing outcomes for people with disability. Conclusions: This scoping review highlights the current scarcity of studies examining the effect that loneliness has on the health and wellbeing outcomes of people with disability. As most of the reviewed studies relied on loneliness measures designed for individuals without disability, they potentially overlook the unique life experiences of people with disability. Given that loneliness is an international public health concern, it is imperative that people with disability are not left behind or overlooked in efforts to address the impact of loneliness on health and wellbeing.",
keywords = "Disability, Wellbeing, Scoping review, Health, Loneliness",
author = "Jodie Bailie and Bishop, {Glenda M.} and Hannah Badland and Eric Emerson and Zoe Aitken and Roger Stancliffe and Kanchana Ekanayake and Gwynnyth Llewellyn",
year = "2023",
month = nov,
day = "29",
doi = "10.1186/s12889-023-17101-9",
language = "English",
volume = "23",
journal = "BMC Public Health",
issn = "1471-2458",
publisher = "BMC",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Health and wellbeing outcomes associated with loneliness for people with disability: a scoping review

AU - Bailie, Jodie

AU - Bishop, Glenda M.

AU - Badland, Hannah

AU - Emerson, Eric

AU - Aitken, Zoe

AU - Stancliffe, Roger

AU - Ekanayake, Kanchana

AU - Llewellyn, Gwynnyth

PY - 2023/11/29

Y1 - 2023/11/29

N2 - Background: Loneliness is a significant public health concern due to its detrimental impact on health and wellbeing. Despite people with disability reporting higher levels of loneliness than the general population, there has been little research into how this is affecting their health and wellbeing. In light of this, the aim of our study was to scope both the existing evidence about the health and wellbeing outcomes associated with loneliness for people with disability, as well as the conceptual frameworks and measures utilised in this field of research. Methods: To conduct this scoping review, we followed the methodology outlined by JBI and searched MEDLINE, Scopus, Informit, Embase, and Web of Science for peer-reviewed, English-language articles published between 1 January 2000 and 8 February 2023. Two independent reviewers completed screening, full-text review and data extraction, with consensus sought at each stage. Data were analysed using content analysis and presented both numerically and narratively. Results: Out of the initial 1602 publications identified in the scoping review, only nine were included after duplicate removal, title and abstract screening, and full-text review. This limited number of studies, with the earliest study one published in 2015, represents a key finding. Eight of the nine studies were quantitative, and all were conducted in high income countries. Most of these studies utilised a version of the University of Los Angles Loneliness Scale to measure loneliness and addressed specific impairment groups. Notably, most of the studies identified associations between loneliness and health and wellbeing outcomes for people with disability. Conclusions: This scoping review highlights the current scarcity of studies examining the effect that loneliness has on the health and wellbeing outcomes of people with disability. As most of the reviewed studies relied on loneliness measures designed for individuals without disability, they potentially overlook the unique life experiences of people with disability. Given that loneliness is an international public health concern, it is imperative that people with disability are not left behind or overlooked in efforts to address the impact of loneliness on health and wellbeing.

AB - Background: Loneliness is a significant public health concern due to its detrimental impact on health and wellbeing. Despite people with disability reporting higher levels of loneliness than the general population, there has been little research into how this is affecting their health and wellbeing. In light of this, the aim of our study was to scope both the existing evidence about the health and wellbeing outcomes associated with loneliness for people with disability, as well as the conceptual frameworks and measures utilised in this field of research. Methods: To conduct this scoping review, we followed the methodology outlined by JBI and searched MEDLINE, Scopus, Informit, Embase, and Web of Science for peer-reviewed, English-language articles published between 1 January 2000 and 8 February 2023. Two independent reviewers completed screening, full-text review and data extraction, with consensus sought at each stage. Data were analysed using content analysis and presented both numerically and narratively. Results: Out of the initial 1602 publications identified in the scoping review, only nine were included after duplicate removal, title and abstract screening, and full-text review. This limited number of studies, with the earliest study one published in 2015, represents a key finding. Eight of the nine studies were quantitative, and all were conducted in high income countries. Most of these studies utilised a version of the University of Los Angles Loneliness Scale to measure loneliness and addressed specific impairment groups. Notably, most of the studies identified associations between loneliness and health and wellbeing outcomes for people with disability. Conclusions: This scoping review highlights the current scarcity of studies examining the effect that loneliness has on the health and wellbeing outcomes of people with disability. As most of the reviewed studies relied on loneliness measures designed for individuals without disability, they potentially overlook the unique life experiences of people with disability. Given that loneliness is an international public health concern, it is imperative that people with disability are not left behind or overlooked in efforts to address the impact of loneliness on health and wellbeing.

KW - Disability

KW - Wellbeing

KW - Scoping review

KW - Health

KW - Loneliness

U2 - 10.1186/s12889-023-17101-9

DO - 10.1186/s12889-023-17101-9

M3 - Journal article

VL - 23

JO - BMC Public Health

JF - BMC Public Health

SN - 1471-2458

IS - 1

M1 - 2361

ER -