Frontiers in Psychology (May 2022)

The Chain-Mediation Pathway of Social Avoidance to Depression in College Students Is Regulated by Self-Esteem

  • Ye Yuan,
  • Ye Yuan,
  • Suhua Jiang,
  • Xi Wen,
  • Zhong Han,
  • Daili Wu,
  • Xuanping Wang,
  • Tingyang Ye,
  • Yimin Hu,
  • Jaesik Jeong,
  • Min Xiang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2022.802161
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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ObjectiveHere, we investigated the relationship between social avoidance and depression in college students, explored the mediating roles of loneliness and trust, and the regulatory role of self-esteem, to provide a theoretical intervention approach based on internal mechanisms.MethodsUsing a simple random overall sampling method, 1,021 college students were investigated using self-rating depression, social avoidance and distress, loneliness, interpersonal trust and self-esteem scales.ResultsThere was a significant positive correlation between social avoidance and depression. Loneliness and interpersonal trust played chain-mediating roles between social avoidance and depression. The influence of social avoidance on interpersonal trust was regulated by self-esteem. Specifically, the social avoidance level of the low self-esteem group was more likely to be affected by interpersonal trust issues.ConclusionSocial avoidance not only directly affects college students’ depression, it also has indirect effects through interpersonal trust and loneliness. Thus, interpersonal trust and loneliness have chain-mediating effects between social avoidance and depression in college students, and self-esteem regulates the mediation process.

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