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Friendship buffering effects on mental health symptoms before and during the COVID-19 pandemic: a UK longitudinal study of young people with childhood adversity

Friendship buffering effects on mental health symptoms before and during the COVID-19 pandemic: a UK longitudinal study of young people with childhood adversity
Friendship buffering effects on mental health symptoms before and during the COVID-19 pandemic: a UK longitudinal study of young people with childhood adversity

Young people with childhood adversity (CA) were at increased risk to experience mental health problems during the COVID-19 pandemic. Pre-pandemic research identified high-quality friendship support as a protective factor that can buffer against the emergence of mental health problems in young people with CA. This longitudinal study investigated friendship buffering effects on mental health symptoms before and at three timepoints during the pandemic in 102 young people (aged 16-26) with low to moderate CA. Multilevel analyses revealed a continuous increase in depression symptoms following the outbreak. Friendship quality was perceived as elevated during lockdowns and returned to pre-pandemic baseline levels during reopening. A stress-sensitizing effect of CA on social functioning was evident, as social thinning occurred following the outbreak. Bivariate latent change score modeling revealed that before and during the pandemic, young people with greater friendship quality self-reported lower depression symptoms and vice versa. Furthermore, sequential mediation analysis showed that high-quality friendships before the pandemic buffered depression symptoms during the pandemic through reducing perceived stress. These findings highlight the importance of fostering stable and supportive friendships in young people with CA and suggest that through reducing stress perceptions high-quality friendships can mitigate mental health problems during times of multidimensional stress.

COVID-19 pandemic, childhood adversity, friendship stress buffering, mental health, young people
0954-5794
König, Maximilian
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Smith, Alicia J.
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Moreno-López, Laura
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Davidson, Eugenia
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Dauvermann, Maria
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Orellana, Sofia
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McCormick, Ethan M.
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Peris, Tara S.
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Kaser, Muzaffer
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Ioannidis, Konstantinos
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van Harmelen, Anne-Laura
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König, Maximilian
2dd2ae90-17bb-450b-ab44-38c936eaf5e2
Smith, Alicia J.
6b5f5657-4e96-4596-bd66-a245f4dd83ef
Moreno-López, Laura
f324241d-5373-4da5-8d6b-55b8e437f4ba
Davidson, Eugenia
c76a7e59-098c-45dd-9fc9-9ec3d0a34ccc
Dauvermann, Maria
5dc41d76-f78c-48a8-a8c7-7c23d05b08bc
Orellana, Sofia
6472709b-d792-492c-bfc2-f58b25be54d8
McCormick, Ethan M.
ffecb173-d78b-4511-bfa5-f1ff6172faaf
Peris, Tara S.
05ca7c10-65fa-4771-859f-4cfe86a9a135
Kaser, Muzaffer
778cfb2c-da5f-4fc4-ab36-9b3745a29e12
Ioannidis, Konstantinos
8ad30a4f-7b70-4189-a06c-e327caed8b2c
van Harmelen, Anne-Laura
6999a060-1bae-4c41-af89-4e0320d99557

König, Maximilian, Smith, Alicia J., Moreno-López, Laura, Davidson, Eugenia, Dauvermann, Maria, Orellana, Sofia, McCormick, Ethan M., Peris, Tara S., Kaser, Muzaffer, Ioannidis, Konstantinos and van Harmelen, Anne-Laura (2025) Friendship buffering effects on mental health symptoms before and during the COVID-19 pandemic: a UK longitudinal study of young people with childhood adversity. Development and Psychopathology. (doi:10.1017/S0954579424001986).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Young people with childhood adversity (CA) were at increased risk to experience mental health problems during the COVID-19 pandemic. Pre-pandemic research identified high-quality friendship support as a protective factor that can buffer against the emergence of mental health problems in young people with CA. This longitudinal study investigated friendship buffering effects on mental health symptoms before and at three timepoints during the pandemic in 102 young people (aged 16-26) with low to moderate CA. Multilevel analyses revealed a continuous increase in depression symptoms following the outbreak. Friendship quality was perceived as elevated during lockdowns and returned to pre-pandemic baseline levels during reopening. A stress-sensitizing effect of CA on social functioning was evident, as social thinning occurred following the outbreak. Bivariate latent change score modeling revealed that before and during the pandemic, young people with greater friendship quality self-reported lower depression symptoms and vice versa. Furthermore, sequential mediation analysis showed that high-quality friendships before the pandemic buffered depression symptoms during the pandemic through reducing perceived stress. These findings highlight the importance of fostering stable and supportive friendships in young people with CA and suggest that through reducing stress perceptions high-quality friendships can mitigate mental health problems during times of multidimensional stress.

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friendship-buffering-effects-on-mental-health-symptoms-before-and-during-the-covid-19-pandemic-a-uk-longitudinal-study-of-young-people-with-childhood-adversity - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 21 December 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 February 2025
Keywords: COVID-19 pandemic, childhood adversity, friendship stress buffering, mental health, young people

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 506537
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/506537
ISSN: 0954-5794
PURE UUID: 3f149e7c-9896-4480-ba96-9d317e7d084d
ORCID for Konstantinos Ioannidis: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1537-5425

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 11 Nov 2025 17:37
Last modified: 12 Nov 2025 03:11

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Contributors

Author: Maximilian König
Author: Alicia J. Smith
Author: Laura Moreno-López
Author: Eugenia Davidson
Author: Maria Dauvermann
Author: Sofia Orellana
Author: Ethan M. McCormick
Author: Tara S. Peris
Author: Muzaffer Kaser
Author: Konstantinos Ioannidis ORCID iD
Author: Anne-Laura van Harmelen

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