Social touch deprivation during the COVID-19 pandemic and reduced well-being
Antje B. M. Gerdes, Svenja Mareike Roether, Georg W. Alpers

TL;DR
The study found that reduced social touch during the pandemic, especially for those not in relationships, significantly lowered well-being.
Contribution
The research highlights social touch as a critical factor for psychological resilience during social distancing.
Findings
Social touch frequency decreased in both personal and professional settings during the pandemic.
Individuals in relationships maintained more stable social touch levels in personal contexts.
Higher social touch was linked to less decline in well-being, regardless of relationship status.
Abstract
Social distancing was mandatory during the COVID-19 pandemic to curtail the spread of infections. This hampered interactions with people who did not share households, including the exchange of social touch. We explored how social distancing influenced people’s experience of social touch and its impact on psychological well-being during the pandemic. In an online survey carried out in Germany (N = 287; 77.5% female), we assessed the estimated number of episodes per day involving social touch in different contexts (personal and professional surroundings) as well as individual factors that may influence the frequency of social touch (e.g., relationship status, living arrangement). Participants retrospectively compared episodes for the time before the outbreak versus during mandatory social distancing. In addition, we examined whether social touch predicts psychological well-being and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPsychology of Social Influence · Attachment and Relationship Dynamics · Tactile and Sensory Interactions
