How technology can help old people fight loneliness during Christmas
Loneliness, as a
leading cause of depression and obesity, is believed to cost £6,000 per person
in health and social care services. Loneliness
is especially prevalent during the winter holidays, perhaps intensified by the
short days, bad weather and the impression that everyone else is enjoying the
festive season with family and friends.
While
loneliness is experienced by all ages, it is especially pronounced in older
people. In the UK, 51% of all people aged 75 and over live alone and
approximately 6% of older adults leave their house once a week or less. An
increasing proportion of these older adults live in rural areas.
In
an age when services and information are increasingly available online, might technology
play a role in addressing loneliness
and social isolation?
Our
research was conducted in South Lakeland – a rural community of Cumbria in
Northern England. Residents aged 65 years and older account for 24.2% of the
population here, against a national average of 17%. While there are two towns,
the majority of the population live in villages, hamlets and isolated
dwellings. Read
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