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The KIND Challenge community intervention to reduce loneliness and social isolation, improve mental health, and neighbourhood relationships: an international randomized controlled trial

Medicine and Health

The KIND Challenge community intervention to reduce loneliness and social isolation, improve mental health, and neighbourhood relationships: an international randomized controlled trial

M. H. Lim, A. Hennessey, et al.

Could small acts of kindness improve mental health and neighbourhood bonds? In three randomized controlled trials across the USA, UK and Australia (N=4,284), participants asked to perform at least one weekly act of kindness for four weeks showed small but significant reductions in loneliness (USA, UK), social isolation, social anxiety and stress, and improved neighbourhood social cohesion. Research conducted by Michelle H. Lim, Alexandra Hennessey, Pamela Qualter, Ben J. Smith, Lily Thurston, Robert Eres and Julianne Holt-Lunstad.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Purpose Loneliness and social isolation are risk factors for poor health, but few effective interventions are deployable at scale. This study was conducted to determine whether acts of kindness can reduce loneliness and social isolation, improve mental health, and neighbourhood social cohesion. Method Three randomized controlled trials (RCTs) were conducted in the USA, UK, and Australia, involving a total of 4284 individuals aged 18–90 years old, randomized to the KIND challenge intervention or a waitlist control group. Participants allocated to the intervention were asked to do at least one act of kindness per week within a four-week period. The primary outcome was loneliness and secondary outcomes included measures of social isolation, mental health, and neighbourhood social cohesion. Results There was a significant, albeit small, intervention effect after four weeks for reduced loneliness in the USA and the UK, but not for Australia. Relative to controls, KIND challenge participants also showed significantly reduced social isolation and social anxiety in the USA, and reduced stress in Australia. There was also reduced neighbourhood conflict in the USA, increased number of neighbourhood contacts in the USA and Australia, greater neighbourhood stability and feelings of neighbourhood importance in the UK, and better neighbourhood social relationships in Australia. Conclusion Promoting the provision of social support through small acts of kindness to neighbours has the potential to reduce loneliness, social isolation and social anxiety, and promote neighbourhood relationships, suggesting a potential strategy for public health campaigns. Trial registration Clinical Trials Registry. NCT04398472. Registered 21st May 2020.
Publisher
Social Psychiatry and Psychiatric Epidemiology
Published On
Aug 19, 2024
Authors
Michelle H. Lim, Alexandra Hennessey, Pamela Qualter, Ben J. Smith, Lily Thurston, Robert Eres, Julianne Holt-Lunstad
Tags
loneliness
social isolation
acts of kindness
randomized controlled trials
neighbourhood social cohesion
mental health
public health intervention
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