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Loneliness and later life: prevalence and consequences Christina Victor, School of Health Sciences & Social Care, Brunel University, UK

Loneliness and later life: prevalence and consequences

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Loneliness and later life: prevalence and consequences. Christina Victor, School of Health Sciences & Social Care, Brunel University, UK. What is loneliness-definition & measurements Prevalence of loneliness Consequences of loneliness. Presentation overview. What gives quality to life?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Loneliness and later life: prevalence  and consequences

Loneliness and later life: prevalence and consequences

Christina Victor,School of Health Sciences &

Social Care,Brunel University, UK

Page 2: Loneliness and later life: prevalence  and consequences

Presentation overview

• What is loneliness-definition & measurements

• Prevalence of loneliness

• Consequences of loneliness

Page 3: Loneliness and later life: prevalence  and consequences

What gives quality to life? • Personal social capital (social

activities, contacts and support, loneliness) a key dimension of quality of life

• Social relationships one of the ‘good things’ that give ‘quality’ to life.

Bowling and Gabriel (2004) (Bowling et al. 2002).

Page 4: Loneliness and later life: prevalence  and consequences

What is loneliness?

“Language... has created the word "loneliness" to express the pain of being alone. And it has created the word "solitude" to express the glory of being alone.” - Paul Tillich

Page 5: Loneliness and later life: prevalence  and consequences

What is loneliness?

Cognitive discrepancy theory

Loneliness results from the difference between desired and actual social relations (Perlman & Pelau, 1981)-either in quantity or quality of relationships (or both)

Theoretical or conceptual understandings of loneliness are both complex and contested (Peplau and Perlman, 1982).

Three main approaches:-

Self rating questionSingle dimension scale-UCLAMulti-dimensional scale-de Jong-Gierveld measure which distinguishes social and emotional loneliness

Page 6: Loneliness and later life: prevalence  and consequences

Loneliness and old ageIn 2010 a survey reported community breakdown as the major contemporary ‘social ills- it was felt that neighbours no longer know or look out for one another, which left people feeling isolated, lonely and fearful – particularly the elderly

‘’Loneliness is an inner, gnawing pain born of circumstance and inertia, verging on despair. There is a higher risk the older you get, and no one talks about it’’

Joan Bakewell-The Times 31/12/09

Page 7: Loneliness and later life: prevalence  and consequences

Loneliness and old age

‘’A distressing feature of old age is loneliness. All who have done welfare work among the old have found it the most common, if at the same time the most imponderable, of the ills from which the aged suffer, and its frequency was amply confirmed by our study’’

(Rowntree, 1947,52)

Page 8: Loneliness and later life: prevalence  and consequences

Prevalence of loneliness

• Peer group (comparison with other older people)

• Generation contrasted (comparison with younger people)

• Age-related (comparison with younger selves)• Preceding cohort (comparison with previous

cohorts of older people)

Page 9: Loneliness and later life: prevalence  and consequences

Are older people the loneliest?

Source: Victor & Yang, 2012

Page 10: Loneliness and later life: prevalence  and consequences

Has loneliness in old age increased?

SHELDON 1948

TOWNSEND1954

VICTOR 2005

Always/often 8 9 9

Sometimes 13 25 32

Never 79 66 61

Source: Victor et al, 2009

Page 11: Loneliness and later life: prevalence  and consequences

Age related loneliness

Loneliness compared with 10 years ago

Loneliness in 10 years time

More 13 16Less 10 13No change 77 71

Page 12: Loneliness and later life: prevalence  and consequences

Loneliness varies over time• 50% reported loneliness worse at night &

two thirds at weekend (Victor et al, 2005)

• ‘’I'm lonely of a night. ‘’(Man 16)

• ‘’Of a night you're lonely’’. (Woman 12)

• ‘’Such a lonely life … Saturdays and Sundays are a bit dead for me…’’

• ‘’So long [Sunday] and so lonely.’’

Source: Bennett & Victor, 2012

Page 13: Loneliness and later life: prevalence  and consequences

How does loneliness vary over time?

• If we follow people aged 65+ over 5 years we find that:-– 25% become more lonely– 12% become less lonely– 22% were always lonely– 44% never lonely

• So we can see different types of loneliness which might have different causes and require different types of interventions

Source: Victor & Bowling, 2012

Page 14: Loneliness and later life: prevalence  and consequences

Understanding loneliness‘’Loneliness and social isolation are subjective lived experiences that exist in the form of multiple realities constructed and reconstructed by individual older people within the context of their different lives and life histories’’ (Victor et al., 2009).

Source: Sullivan & Victor, 2012

Page 15: Loneliness and later life: prevalence  and consequences

Loneliness & ethnic minorities

Source: Victor & Burholt, 2012

Page 16: Loneliness and later life: prevalence  and consequences

Why does loneliness matter?

• Reduced or low quality of life

• Negative health behaviours (e.g. smoking, alcohol)

• Negative health outcomes - Early studies by Durkheim link loneliness to mortality-50% higher for those lonely/isolated (independent of health status!)

• Excessive use of health services-hospital admission, A&E contact,GP consultations

Page 17: Loneliness and later life: prevalence  and consequences