Aging In Place

9/9/2024 | By Martha McCully

No one likes to feel lonely. Even worse is how loneliness and social isolation can affect your health.

Last year, the U.S. surgeon general, Dr. Vivek Murthy, issued an official advisory on what he calls the “epidemic” and “public health crisis” of loneliness and isolation, linked equally to mortality as cigarette smoking or obesity. As we age, disconnection from organized social circles, work and family members and friends exacerbates the problem.

Even before the pandemic, half of the adults in the United States reported experiencing loneliness. What are the effects of loneliness?

“Premature death, let’s start with that,” says Dr. Mark Lachs, co-chief of the division of geriatrics and palliative medicine at Weill Cornell Medicine in New York City.

One study found that loneliness increases the risk of premature death by 26%. The surgeon general’s advisory puts the risk of premature death at 60%. Loneliness increases the risk of heart disease by 29%, dementia by 50% and stroke by 32%. It can contribute to depression, anxiety, even suicide.

Sad older man feeling lonely, part of the U.S. epidemic of loneliness

Studies also suggest that people who are socially engaged are better off cognitively. Luckily, therapy for loneliness and social isolation is simple: it’s social connection. The surgeon general suggests “creating a culture of connection” to break the cycle of loneliness.

Small acts of service can foster connection. Devote 15 minutes a day to reaching out to someone; extend kindness in the form of smiling and interacting with others, even if it’s the delivery guy; check in on a neighbor. Consider volunteering or joining a community organization. And when you’re with another person at dinner, put your phone away.

In Lachs’ division at Weill Cornell Medicine, the Center for Research and Education for Aging and Technology Enhancement studies how technology tools can aid social connectivity for older people, even the cognitively impaired. The center is also developing virtual reality programs that may allow people in different places to tour a museum together, or even share a meal.

Eventually these tools will be available to ease isolation. Why does loneliness devastate our health? “We desire connection,” says Lachs. “It’s basic to human beings and to being human.”

Help from Seniors Guide in easing loneliness:

Six Apps for When You Feel Lonely

10 Ways to Help Ease Loneliness as a Senior

The Benefits of Friendships in Senior Living Communities

Martha McCully is a contributing writer at Kiplinger Retirement Report. For more on this and similar money topics, visit Kiplinger.com.

©2024 The Kiplinger Washington Editors, Inc. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Martha McCully