# Social Networks and Loneliness in the Blackfeet American Indian Community

**Authors:** Neha A. John-Henderson, Betty Henderson-Matthews, Zachary J. Wood, Skye Gilham, George Heavy Runner, Lester R. Johnson, III, Mary Ellen Lafromboise, Melveena Malatare, Emily M. Salois

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s12529-025-10347-0 · International Journal of Behavioral Medicine · 2025-01-30

## TL;DR

This study explores how social networks affect loneliness differently for Blackfeet women and men in Montana.

## Contribution

The study is the first to examine gender moderation of social networks and loneliness in Blackfeet American Indian adults.

## Key findings

- Women with small social networks reported greater loneliness compared to men with similar networks.
- Higher social integration reduced loneliness in women but not in men.
- Social network characteristics predicted loneliness for Blackfeet women but not men.

## Abstract

While characteristics of an individual’s social network and reported loneliness may be linked, they can be distinct. Prior work indicates that gender moderates the relationship between social networks and loneliness; however, these relationships have not been investigated in American Indian adults. The current work investigates whether the relationship between characteristics of one’s social network (i.e., social network size and social integration) and loneliness is moderated by gender in a sample of Blackfeet American Indian adults.

At Wave 1 of a longitudinal research project, we used linear regression to test whether gender moderates the relationship between social network characteristics and loneliness in a sample of 275 Blackfeet American Indian adults living in the Blackfeet nation in Montana. Our analyses controlled for age, education, and symptoms and depression and anxiety.

Gender moderated the relationship between social network size and loneliness (β = − 0.15, t(265) = − 2.71, p = 0.01, r2 change = .04), and the relationship between social integration and loneliness (β = − 0.14, t(265) = − 2.68, p = 0.01, r2 change = .03). Women with small social networks reported significantly greater loneliness compared to men with similarly small social networks, and for women higher social integration (i.e., more social roles) related to lower loneliness, but this was not the case for men.

Social network characteristics predict loneliness for Blackfeet women but not Blackfeet men in this sample. Future work should elucidate predictors of loneliness for Blackfeet men and consider whether daily changes in social connectedness predict changes in loneliness and whether changes in social networks predict changes in loneliness.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** anxiety (MESH:D001007), depression (MESH:D003866)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13011821