Researchers analyzed hundreds of existing studies to understand the connection between having a sense of meaning in life and experiencing depression. They combined data from 278 studies involving over 250,000 people in total. The analysis found a consistent pattern: people who reported a stronger sense of meaning or purpose in their lives also tended to report lower levels of depression. The strength of this link was moderate.
The study did not test a treatment or intervention. It simply looked at the relationship between these two factors as they were reported in many different surveys and research projects. The researchers noted that the connection was influenced by several things, including how meaning and depression were measured, a person's health status, and the language of the study.
It is important to be careful with these results. This type of research can only show that two things are related, not that one causes the other. We cannot say that increasing meaning in life will directly reduce depression, or that depression causes a loss of meaning. The findings suggest these concepts are connected, which could help guide future research into psychological support. For now, this large review confirms an association that experts have long discussed.