Abstract

Loneliness in later life is a common problem with poor health outcomes. However, interventions to prevent or ameliorate loneliness have a weak evidence base. The views of older people experiencing or at risk of loneliness in the community are important in identifying features of potential support, but have been little studied. Twenty‐eight community dwelling people, aged 65 and over who reported being ‘lonely much of the time’ or identified as lonely from the de Jong Gierveld six‐item loneliness scale in a larger study, participated in in‐depth interviews, between June 2013 and May 2014. Views and experiences on seeking support from primary care and community based one‐to‐one and group based activities, including social and shared interest groups, were explored. Interviews were recorded and transcribed. Thematic analysis was conducted by a multidisciplinary team, including older people. Using two different measures of loneliness enabled a spectrum of loneliness experience to be explored. Two‐thirds of the participants were the ‘younger old’ and all were able to leave their homes independently. Older people with characteristics of loneliness were generally knowledgeable about local social and community resources but, for the majority, community and primary care based services for their loneliness were not considered desirable or helpful at this point in their lives. However, group based activities with a shared interest were thought preferable to one‐to‐one support (befriending) or groups with a social focus. Descriptions of support as being for loneliness and specific to older people discouraged engagement. Older people experiencing or at risk of loneliness did not consider that primary care has a role in alleviating loneliness because it is not an illness. They thought primary care practitioners lack understanding of non‐physical problems and that a good relationship was necessary to discuss sensitive issues like loneliness. For many, loneliness was a complex and private matter that they wished to manage without external support.

Highlights

  • Loneliness in later life is increasingly considered a public health problem (Department of Health2012; World Health Organisation 2002)

  • This paper describes findings from a study that aimed to explore the perspectives of communitydwelling lonely older people about seeking support for loneliness from primary and community based services and the features of these services which informed their views

  • Population and setting: This study was nested within the [anonymised for review] study which explored the feasibility of embedding a health and well-being risk appraisal system into primary care

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Summary

Introduction

It has a prevalence of 16-35 % in those aged 65 and over, rising to up to half of those over 80 years, with severe loneliness (lonely all or most of the time) occurring in between 5% - 13% of the older community dwelling population in the UK (Luanaigh and Lawlor 2008; Victor et al 2005, Age UK 2010, Savikko et al 2005). Loneliness is linked closely to other experiences associated with ageing, such as loss of family and friends and declining health and income, as well as more recent socio-demographic trends such as longevity, living alone for longer, relationship breakdown, and changes to families and communities Depression and loneliness in older people are strongly associated (Green et al1992, Cacioppo et al 2006, Golden et al 2009) while loneliness seems an independent risk factor for future depression (Heikkinen and Kauppinen 2004)

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