Loneliness

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Loneliness by Hans Thoma (National Museum in Warsaw)

Loneliness is an unpleasant emotional response to perceived isolation. Loneliness is also described as social pain—a psychological mechanism which motivates individuals to seek social connections. It is often associated with an unwanted lack of connection and intimacy. Loneliness overlaps and yet is distinct from solitude. Solitude is simply the state of being apart from others; not everyone who experiences solitude feels lonely. As a subjective emotion, loneliness can be felt even when surrounded by other people; one who feels lonely, is lonely. The causes of loneliness are varied. They include social, mental, emotional, and environmental factors.

Research has shown that loneliness is found throughout society, including among people in marriages along with other strong relationships, and those with successful careers. Most people experience loneliness at some points in their lives, and some feel it very often. As a short term emotion, loneliness can be beneficial; it encourages the strengthening of relationships. Chronic loneliness on the other hand is widely considered harmful, with numerous reviews and meta-studies concluding it is a significant risk factor for poor mental and physical health outcomes.

Loneliness has long been a theme in literature, going back to the Epic of Gilgamesh. Yet academic study of loneliness was sparse until the late twentieth century. In the 21st century, loneliness has been increasingly recognised as a social problem, with both NGOs and governmental actors seeking to tackle it.

Causes[edit]

Thomas Wolfe who in an often quoted passage stated "The whole conviction of my life now rests upon the belief that loneliness, far from being a rare and curious phenomenon, is the central and inevitable fact of human existence."[1]

Existential[edit]

Loneliness has long been viewed as a universal condition which, at least to a moderate extent, is felt by everyone. From this perspective, some degree of loneliness is inevitable as the limitations of human life mean it is impossible for anyone to continually satisfy their inherent need for connection. Professors including Michele A. Carter and Ben Lazare Mijuskovic have written books and essays tracking the existential perspective and the many writers who have talked about it throughout history.[2][3] Thomas Wolfe's 1930s essay God's Lonely Man is frequently discussed in this regard; Wolfe makes the case that everyone imagines they are lonely in a special way unique to themselves, whereas really every single person sometimes suffers from loneliness. While agreeing that loneliness alleviation can be a good thing, those who take the existential view tend to doubt such efforts can ever be fully successful, seeing some level of loneliness as both unavoidable and even beneficial, as it can help people appreciate the joy of living.[1][4]

Cultural[edit]

Culture is discussed as a cause of loneliness in two senses. Migrants can suffer from loneliness due to missing their home culture. Studies have found this effect can be especially strong for students from countries in Asia with a collective culture, when they come to study at universities in more individualist English speaking countries.[5] Culture is also seen as a cause of loneliness in the sense that western culture may have been contributing to loneliness, ever since the enlightenment began to favour individualism over older communal values.[4][6][1]

Relationship loss[edit]

Loneliness is a very common, though often temporary, consequence of a relationship breakup or bereavement. The loss of a significant person in one's life will typically initiate a grief response; in this situation, one might feel lonely, even while in the company of others. Loneliness can occur due to the disruption to one's social circle, sometimes combined with homesickness, which results from people moving away for work or education.[1][6]

Situational[edit]

All sorts of situations and events can cause loneliness, especially in combination with certain personality traits for susceptible individuals. For example, an extroverted person who is highly social is more likely to feel lonely if they are living some where with a low population density, with fewer people for them to interact with. Loneliness can sometimes even be caused by events that might normally be expected to alleviate it: for example the birth of a child (if there is significant postpartum depression) or after getting married (especially if the marriage turns out to be unstable, overly disruptive to previous relationships, or emotionally cold.) In addition to being impacted by external events, loneliness can be aggravated by pre-existing mental health conditions like chronic depression and anxiety.[1][6]

Self perpetuating[edit]

Long term loneliness can cause various types of maladaptive social cognition, such as hypervigilance and social awkwardness, which can make it harder for an individual to maintain existing relationships, or establish new ones. Various studies have found that therapy targeted at addressing this maladaptive cognition is the single most effective way of intervening to reduce loneliness, though it does not always work for everyone.[7][8][9]

Social contagion[edit]

Loneliness can spread through social groups like a disease. The mechanism for this involves the maladaptive cognition that often results from chronic loneliness. If a man loses a friend for whatever reason, this may increase his loneliness, resulting in him developing maladaptive cognition such as excessive neediness or suspicion of other friends. Hence leading to a further loss of human connection if he then goes on to split up with his remaining friends. Those other friends now become more lonely too, leading to a ripple effect of loneliness. Studies have however found that this contagion effect is not consistent - a small increase in loneliness does not always cause the maladaptive cognition. Also, when someone loses a friend, they will sometimes form new friendships or deepen other existing relationships.[7][10][11][12]

Internet[edit]

Studies have tended to find a moderate correlation between extensive internet use and loneliness, especially ones that draw on data from the 1990s, before internet use became widespread. Contradictory results have been found by studies investigating whether the association is simply a result of lonely people being more attracted to the internet, or if the internet can actually cause loneliness. The displacement hypothesis holds that some people chose to withdraw from real world social interactions so they can have more time for the internet. Excessive internet use can directly cause anxiety and depression, conditions which can contribute to loneliness - yet these factors may be offset by the internet's ability to facilitate interaction, and to empower people. Some studies found that internet use is a cause of loneliness, at least for some types of people.[13][14] while others have found internet use can have a significant positive effect on reducing loneliness.[15][16] The authors of meta studies and reviews from about 2015 and later have tended to argue that there is a bidirectional causal relationship between loneliness and internet use. Excessive use, especially if passive, can increase loneliness. While moderate use, especially by users who engage with others rather than just passively consume content, can increase social connection and reduce loneliness.[17][18][19]

Genetics[edit]

In 2016, the first Genome-wide association study of loneliness found that the heredity of loneliness is about 14-27%. So while genes play a role in determining how much loneliness a person may feel, they are less of a factor than individual experiences and the environment. Previous smaller studies however, had estimated that loneliness may be between 37 - 55% hereditable.[20][21]

Other[edit]

People making long driving commutes have reported dramatically higher feelings of loneliness (as well as other negative health impacts).[22][23]

Typology[edit]

Two principal types of loneliness are social and emotional loneliness. This delineation was made in 1973 by Robert S. Weiss, in his seminal work: Loneliness: The Experience of Emotional and Social Isolation[24] Based on Weiss's view that "both types of loneliness have to be examined independently, because the satisfaction for the need of emotional loneliness cannot act as a counterbalance for social loneliness, and vice versa", people working to treat or better understand loneliness have tended to treat these two types of loneliness separately, though this is far from always the case.[25][5]

Social loneliness[edit]

Social loneliness is the loneliness people experience because of the lack of a wider social network. They may not feel they are members of a community, or that they have friends or allies whom they can rely on in times of distress.[24][5]

Emotional loneliness[edit]

Emotional loneliness results from the lack of deep, nurturing relationships with other people. Weiss tied his concept of emotional loneliness to attachment theory. People have a need for deep attachments, which can be fulfilled by close friends, though more often by close family members such as parents, and later in life by romantic partners. In 1997, Enrico DiTommaso and Barry Spinner separated emotional loneliness into Romantic and Family loneliness.[5] [26] A 2019 study found that emotional loneliness significantly increased the likelihood of death for older adults living alone (whereas there was no increase in mortality found with social loneliness).[26]

Family loneliness[edit]

Family loneliness results when individuals feel they lack close ties with family members. A 2010 study of 1,009 students found that only family loneliness was associated with increased frequency of self harm, not romantic or social loneliness.[27][5]

Romantic loneliness[edit]

Romantic loneliness can be experienced by adolescents and adults who lack a close bond with a romantic partner. Psychologists have asserted that the formation of a committed romantic relationship is a critical development task for young adults, but is also one that many are delaying into their late 20s or beyond. People in romantic relationships tend to report less loneliness than single people, providing their relationship provides them with emotional intimacy. People in unstable or emotionally cold romantic partnerships can still feel romantic loneliness.[28][5]

Other[edit]

Several other typologies and types of loneliness exist. Further types of loneliness include existential loneliness, cosmic loneliness - feeling alone in a hostile universe, and cultural loneliness - typically found among immigrants who miss their home culture.[4] These types are less well studied than the threefold separation into social, romantic and family loneliness, yet can be valuable in understanding the experience of certain sub groups suffering from loneliness.[2][5]

Lockdown loneliness

Lockdown loneliness refers to "loneliness resulting because of social disconnection due to enforced social distancing and lockdowns during the COVID-19 pandemic and similar other emergency situations" such as the COVID-19 pandemic.[29]]

Demarcation[edit]

Feeling lonely vs. being socially isolated[edit]

There is a clear distinction between feeling lonely and being socially isolated (for example, a loner). In particular, one way of thinking about loneliness is as a discrepancy between one's necessary and achieved levels of social interaction,[30] while solitude is simply the lack of contact with people. Loneliness is therefore a subjective experience; if a person thinks they are lonely, then they are lonely. People can be lonely while in solitude, or in the middle of a crowd. What makes a person lonely is the fact that they need more social interaction or a certain type of social interaction that is not currently available. A person can be in the middle of a party and feel lonely due to not talking to enough people. Conversely, one can be alone and not feel lonely; even though there is no one around that person is not lonely because there is no desire for social interaction. There have also been suggestions that each person has their own optimal level of social interaction. If a person gets too little or too much social interaction, this could lead to feelings of loneliness or over-stimulation.[31]

Solitude can have positive effects on individuals. One study found that, although time spent alone tended to depress a person's mood and increase feelings of loneliness, it also helped to improve their cognitive state, such as improving concentration. It can be argued some individuals seek solitude for discovering a more meaningful and vital existence.[32] Furthermore, once the alone time was over, people's moods tended to increase significantly.[33] Solitude is also associated with other positive growth experiences, religious experiences, and identity building such as solitary quests used in rites of passages for adolescents.[34]

Transient vs. chronic loneliness[edit]

Another important typology of loneliness focuses on the time perspective.[35] In this respect, loneliness can be viewed as either transient or chronic.

Transient loneliness is temporary in nature; generally it is easily relieved. Chronic loneliness is more permanent and not easily relieved.[36] For example, when a person is sick and cannot socialize with friends, this would be a case of transient loneliness. Once the person got better it would be easy for them to alleviate their loneliness. A person with long term feelings of loneliness regardless of if they are at a family gathering or with friends is experiencing chronic loneliness.

Loneliness as a human condition[edit]

The existentialist school of thought views individuality as the essence of being human. Each human being comes into the world alone, travels through life as a separate person, and ultimately dies alone. Coping with this, accepting it, and learning how to direct our own lives with some degree of grace and satisfaction is the human condition.[37]

Some philosophers, such as Sartre, believe in an epistemic loneliness in which loneliness is a fundamental part of the human condition because of the paradox between people's consciousness desiring meaning in life and the isolation and nothingness of the universe.[38] Conversely, other existentialist thinkers argue that human beings might be said to actively engage each other and the universe as they communicate and create, and loneliness is merely the feeling of being cut off from this process.

In his 2019 text, Evidence of Being: The Black Gay Cultural Renaissance and the Politics of Violence, Darius Bost draws from Heather Love's theorization of loneliness[39] to delineate the ways in which loneliness structures black gay feeling and literary, cultural productions. Bost limns, "As a form of negative affect, loneliness shores up the alienation, isolation, and pathologization of black gay men during the 1980s and early 1990s. But loneliness is also a form of bodily desire, a yearning for an attachment to the social and for a future beyond the forces that create someone's alienation and isolation."[40]

Prevalence[edit]

Thousands of studies and surveys have been undertaken to assess the prevalence of loneliness. Yet it remains challenging for scientists to make accurate generalisations and comparisons. Reasons for this include various loneliness measurement scales being used by different studies, differences in how even the same scale is implemented from study to study, and as cultural variations across time and space may impact how people report the largely subjective phenomena of loneliness.[18][41]

One consistent finding has been that loneliness is not evenly distributed across a nation's population. It tends to be concentrated among vulnerable sub groups; for example the poor, the unemployed, and immigrants. Some of the most severe loneliness tends to be found among international students from countries in Asia with a collective culture, when they come to study in countries with a more individualist culture, such as Australia.[5] In New Zealand, the fourteen surveyed groups with the highest prevalence of loneliness most/all of the time in descending order are: disabled, recent migrants, low income households, unemployed, single parents, rural (rest of South Island), seniors aged 75+, not in the labour force, youth aged 15–24, no qualifications, not housing owner-occupier, not in a family nucleus, Māori, and low personal income.[42]

Studies have found inconsistent results concerning the effect of age, gender and culture on loneliness.[43] Much 20th century and early 21st century writing on loneliness assumed it typically increases with age. Yet as of 2020, with some exceptions, recent studies have tended to find that it is young people who report the most loneliness (though loneliness is still found to be a severe problem for the very old).[44] There have been contradictory results concerning how the prevalence of loneliness varies with gender. A 2020 analyses based on a worldwide dataset gathered by the BBC found greater loneliness among men, though some earlier work had found the opposite, or that gender made no difference.[43][5][45][41]

While cross cultural comparisons are difficult to interpret with high confidence, the 2020 analyses based on the BBC dataset found the more individualist countries like the UK tended to have higher levels of loneliness. However, previous empirical work had often found that people living in more collectivist cultures tended to report greater loneliness, possibly due to less freedom to chose the sort of relationships that suit them best.[43][46]

In the 21st century, loneliness has been widely reported as an increasing worldwide problem. In 2017, loneliness was labelled a growing "epidemic" by Vivek Murthy, former Surgeon General of the United States. It has since been described as an epidemic thousands of times, by reporters, academics and other public officials. A 2010 systematic review and meta analyses had stated that the "modern way of life in industrialized countries" is greatly reducing the quality of social relationships, partly due to people no longer living in close proximity with their extended families. The review notes that from 1990 to 2010, the number of Americans reporting no close confidants has tripled.[47] Worldwide though there is little historical data to conclusively demonstrate an increase in loneliness. Several reviews have found no clear evidence of an increase in loneliness even in the USA. Professors such as Claude S. Fischer and Eric Klinenberg opined in 2018 that while the data doesn't support describing loneliness as an "epidemic" or even as a clearly growing problem, loneliness is indeed a serious issue, having a severe health impact on millions of people.[48][49][50][51]

Effects[edit]

Transient[edit]

While unpleasant, temporary feelings of loneliness are sometimes experienced by almost everyone, and are not thought to cause long term harm. Early 20th century work sometimes treated loneliness as a wholly negative phenomena. Yet transient loneliness is now generally considered beneficial. The capacity to feel it may have been evolutionarily selected for, a healthy aversive emotion that motivates individuals to strengthen social connections.[52] Transient loneliness is sometimes compared to short-term hunger, which is unpleasant but ultimately useful as it motivates us to eat.[8][5][53]

Chronic[edit]

Long-term loneliness is widely considered a close to entirely harmful condition. Whereas transient loneliness typically motivates us to improve relationships with others, chronic loneliness can have the opposite effect. This is as long-term social isolation can cause hypervigilance. While enhanced vigilance may have been evolutionary adaptive for individuals who went long periods without others watching their backs, it can lead to excessive cynicism and suspicion of other people, which in turn can be detrimental to interpersonal relationships. So without intervention, chronic loneliness can be self-reinforcing.[5][53]

Benefits[edit]

Much has been written about the benefits of being alone, yet often, even when authors use the word "loneliness", they are referring to what could be more precisely described as voluntary solitude. Yet some assert that even long-term involuntary loneliness can have beneficial effects.[54][6]

Chronic loneliness is often seen as a purely negative phenomena from the lens of social and medical science. Yet in spiritual and artistic traditions, it has been viewed as having mixed effects. Though even within these traditions, there can be warnings not to intentionally seek out chronic loneliness or other afflictions - just advise that if one falls into them, there can be benefits. In western arts, there is a long belief that psychological hardship, including loneliness, can be a source of creativity.[6] In spiritual traditions, perhaps the most obvious benefit of loneliness is that in can increase the desire for a union with the divine. More esoterically, the psychic wound opened up by loneliness or other afflictions has been said, e.g. by Simone Weil, to open up space for God to manifest within the soul. In Christianity, spiritual dryness has been seen as advantageous as part of the "dark night of the soul", an ordeal that while painful, can result in spiritual transformation.[55][6] From a secular perspective, while the vast majority of empirical studies focus on the negative effects of long term loneliness, a few studies have found there can also be benefits, such as enhanced perceptiveness of social situations.[6][56]

Physical health[edit]

Chronic loneliness can be a serious, life-threatening health condition. It has been found to be strongly associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, though direct causal links have yet to be firmly identified.[57][58] People experiencing loneliness tend to have an increased incidence of high blood pressure, high cholesterol, and obesity.[59]

Loneliness has been shown to increase the concentration of cortisol levels in the body and weaken the effects dopamine, the hormone that makes people enjoy things.[59] Prolonged, high cortisol levels can cause anxiety, depression, digestive problems, heart disease, sleep problems, and weight gain.[60]

Associational studies on loneliness and the immune system have found mixed results, with lower natural killer (NK) cell activity or dampened antibody response to viruses such Epstein Barr, herpes, and influenza, but either slower or no change to the progression of AIDS.[59]

Death[edit]

A 2010 systematic review and meta- analyses found a significant association between loneliness and increased mortality. People with good social relationships were found to have a 50% greater chance of survival compared to lonely people ( odds ratio = 1.5). In other words, chronic loneliness seems to be a risk factor for death comparable to smoking, and greater than obesity or lack of exercise.[47] A 2017 overview of systematic reviews found other meta-studies with similar findings. However, clear causative links between loneliness and early death have not been firmly established.[57]

Mental health[edit]

Loneliness has been linked with depression, and is thus a risk factor for suicide.[61] Émile Durkheim has described loneliness, specifically the inability or unwillingness to live for others, i.e. for friendships or altruistic ideas, as the main reason for what he called egoistic suicide.[62][63] In adults, loneliness is a major precipitant of depression and alcoholism.[64] People who are socially isolated may report poor sleep quality, and thus have diminished restorative processes.[65] Loneliness has also been linked with a schizoid character type in which one may see the world differently and experience social alienation, described as the self in exile.[66]

While the long-term effects of extended periods of loneliness are little understood, it has been noted that people who are isolated or experience loneliness for a long period of time fall into a "ontological crisis" or "ontological insecurity," where they are not sure if they or their surroundings exist, and if they do, exactly who or what they are, creating torment, suffering, and despair to the point of palpability within the thoughts of the person.[67][68]

In children, a lack of social connections is directly linked to several forms of antisocial and self-destructive behavior, most notably hostile and delinquent behavior. In both children and adults, loneliness often has a negative impact on learning and memory. Its disruption of sleep patterns can have a significant impact on the ability to function in everyday life.[61]

Research from a large-scale study published in the journal Psychological Medicine, showed that "lonely millennials are more likely to have mental health problems, be out of work and feel pessimistic about their ability to succeed in life than their peers who feel connected to others, regardless of gender or wealth".[69][70]

In 2004, the United States Department of Justice published a study indicating that loneliness increases suicide rates profoundly among juveniles, with 62% of all suicides that occurred within juvenile facilities being among those who either were, at the time of the suicide, in solitary confinement or among those with a history of being housed thereof.[67]

Pain, depression, and fatigue function as a symptom cluster and thus may share common risk factors. Two longitudinal studies with different populations demonstrated that loneliness was a risk factor for the development of the pain, depression, and fatigue symptom cluster over time. These data also highlight the health risks of loneliness; pain, depression, and fatigue often accompany serious illness and place people at risk for poor health and mortality.[71]

The psychiatrist George Vaillant and the director of longitudinal Study of Adult Development at Harvard University Robert J. Waldinger found that those who were happiest and healthier reported strong interpersonal relationships.[72]

Suicide[edit]

Loneliness can cause suicidal thoughts (suicidal ideation), attempts at suicide and actual suicide. The extent to which suicides result from loneliness are difficult to determine however, as there are typically several potential causes involved.[57][1] In an article written for the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention Dr. Jeremy Noble writes, "You don't have to be a doctor to recognize the connection between loneliness and suicide".[73] As feelings of loneliness intensify so do thoughts of suicide and attempts at suicide.[74] The loneliness that triggers suicidal tendencies impacts all facets of society.

The Samaritans, a nonprofit charity in England, who work with people going through crisis says there is a definite correlation between feelings of loneliness and suicide for juveniles and those in their young adult years.[74] The Office of National Statistics, in England, found one of the top ten reasons young people have suicidal idealizations and attempt suicide is because they are lonely.[75] College students, lonely, away from home, living in new unfamiliar surroundings, away from friends feel isolated and without proper coping skills will turn to suicide as a way to fix the pain of loneliness.[75] A common theme, among children and young adults dealing with feelings of loneliness is they didn't know help was available, or where to get help. Loneliness, to them, is a source of shame.[75]

Older people can also struggle with feelings of severe loneliness which lead them to consider acting on thoughts of suicide or self-harm. In some countries, senior citizens appear to commit a high proportion of suicides, though in other countries there is a significantly higher rate for middle-aged men. Retirement, poor health, loss of a significant other or other family or friends, all contribute to loneliness. Suicides caused by loneliness in older people can be difficult to identify. Often they don't have anyone to disclose their feelings of loneliness and the despair it brings. They may stop eating, alter the doses of medications, or choose not to treat an illness as a way to help expedite death so they don't have to deal with feeling lonely.[57][1]

Cultural influences can also cause loneliness leading to suicidal thoughts or actions. For example, Hispanic and Japanese cultures value interdependence. When a person from one of these cultures feels removed or feels like they can't sustain relationships in their families or society, they start to have negative behaviors, including negative thoughts or acting self-destructively. Other cultures, such as in Europe, are more independent. While the cause of loneliness in a person may stem from different circumstances or cultural norms, the impact lead to the same results – a desire to end life.

Society level[edit]

High levels of chronic loneliness can also have society wide effects. Noreena Hertz writes that Hannah Arendt was the first to discuss the link between loneliness and the politics of intolerance. In her book The Origins of Totalitarianism Arendt argues that loneliness is an essential prerequisite for a totalitarian movement to gain power. Hertz sates that the link between an individual's loneliness and their likelihood to vote for a populist political party or candidate has since been supported by several empirical studies. In addition to increasing support for populist policies, Hertz argues that a society with high levels of loneliness risks eroding its ability to have effective mutually beneficial politics. Partly as loneliness tends to make people more suspicious about each other. And also as some of the ways individuals alleviate loneliness, such as technological or transactional substitutes for human companionship, can reduce peoples political and social skills, such as their ability to compromise and to see other points of view. [76][77] [78]

Physiological mechanisms link to poor health[edit]

There are a number of potential physiological mechanisms linking loneliness to poor health outcomes. In 2005, results from the American Framingham Heart Study demonstrated that lonely men had raised levels of Interleukin 6 (IL-6), a blood chemical linked to heart disease. A 2006 study conducted by the Center for Cognitive and Social Neuroscience at the University of Chicago found loneliness can add thirty points to a blood pressure reading for adults over the age of fifty. Another finding, from a survey conducted by John Cacioppo from the University of Chicago, is that doctors report providing better medical care to patients who have a strong network of family and friends than they do to patients who are alone. Cacioppo states that loneliness impairs cognition and willpower, alters DNA transcription in immune cells, and leads over time to high blood pressure.[79] Lonelier people are more likely to show evidence of viral reactivation than less lonely people.[80] Lonelier people also have stronger inflammatory responses to acute stress compared with less lonely people; inflammation is a well known risk factor for age-related diseases.[81]

When someone feels left out of a situation, they feel excluded and one possible side effect is for their body temperature to decrease. When people feel excluded blood vessels at the periphery of the body may narrow, preserving core body heat. This class protective mechanism is known as vasoconstriction.[82]

Relief[edit]

The reduction of loneliness in oneself and others has long been a motive for human activity and social organisation. For some commentators, such as professor Ben Lazare Mijuskovic, ever since the dawn of civilization, it has been the single strongest motivator for human activity after essential physical needs are satisfied. Loneliness is the first negative condition identified in the Holy Bible, with the Book of Genesis showing God creating a companion for man to relieve loneliness. Nevertheless, there is relatively little direct record of explicit loneliness relief efforts prior to the 20th century. Some commentators including professor Rubin Gotesky have argued the sense of aloneness was rarely felt until older communal ways of living began to be disrupted by the enlightenment.[2][4][6]

Starting in the 1900s, and especially in the 21st century, efforts explicitly aiming to alleviate loneliness became much more common. Loneliness reduction efforts occur across multiple disciplines, often by actors for whom loneliness relief is not their primary concern. For example, by commercial firms, civic planers, designers of new housing developments, and university administration. Across the world, many department, NGOs and even umbrella groups entirely dedicated to loneliness relief have been established. For example, in the UK, the Campaign to End Loneliness. With loneliness a complex condition, there is no single method that can consistently alleviate it for different individuals; many different approaches are used.[8][50][6]

Medical treatment[edit]

Therapy is a common way of treating loneliness. For individuals whose loneliness is caused by factors that respond well to medical intervention, it is often successful. Short-term therapy, the most common form for lonely or depressed patients, typically occurs over a period of ten to twenty weeks. During therapy, emphasis is put on understanding the cause of the problem, reversing the negative thoughts, feelings, and attitudes resulting from the problem, and exploring ways to help the patient feel connected. Some doctors also recommend group therapy as a means to connect with other sufferers and establish a support system.[83] Doctors also frequently prescribe anti-depressants to patients as a stand-alone treatment, or in conjunction with therapy. It may take several attempts before a suitable anti-depressant medication is found.[84]

Doctors often see a high proportion of patients suffering from loneliness; a UK survey found that three-quarters of Doctors believed that between 1-5 patients visited them each day mainly out of loneliness. There isn't always sufficient funds to pay for therapy, leading to the rise of "social prescription", where Doctors can refer patients to NGO and Community led solutions such as group activities. While preliminary findings suggest social prescription has good results for some people, the evidence to support its effectiveness is not strong, with commentators advising that for some people it is not a good alternative to medical therapy.[85][1][86][87][18]

NGO and community led[edit]

Along with growing awareness of the problem of loneliness, community led projects explicitly aiming for its relief became more common in the latter half of the 20th century, with still more starting up in the 21st. There have been many thousands of such projects across North and South America, Europe, Asia and Africa. Some campaigns are run nationally under the control of charities dedicated to loneliness relief, while other efforts may be local projects, sometimes run by a group for which loneliness relief is not their primary objective. For example, housing associations that aim to ensure multi generational living, with social interaction between younger and older people encouraged, in some cases even contractually required. Projects range from befriending schemes that facilitate just two people meeting up, to large group activities, which will often have other objectives in addition to loneliness relief. Such as having fun, improving physical health with exercise, or participating in conservation efforts.[88][6][18]

Government[edit]

In the UK, the Jo Cox Commission on Loneliness began pushing to make tackling loneliness a government priority from 2016. In 2018, this led to Great Britain becoming the first country in the world to appoint a ministerial lead for loneliness, and to publish an official loneliness reduction strategy. There have since been calls for other countries to appoint their own minister for loneliness, for example in Sweden and Germany. Various other countries had seen government led anti loneliness efforts even before 2018 however. For example, in 2017 the government of Singapore started a scheme to provide allotments to its citizens so they could socialise while working together on them, while the Netherlands government set up a telephone line for lonely older people. While governments sometimes directly control loneliness relief efforts, typically they fund or work in partnership with educational institutions, companies and NGOs.[89][90][91][92][6][93]

Pets[edit]

Paro, a robot pet seal classified as a medical device by U.S. regulators

Pet therapy, or animal-assisted therapy, can be used to treat both loneliness and depression. The presence of animal companions, especially dogs, but also others like cats, rabbits, and guinea pigs, can ease feelings of depression and loneliness among some sufferers. Beyond the companionship the animal itself provides there may also be increased opportunities for socializing with other pet owners. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention there are a number of other health benefits associated with pet ownership, including lowered blood pressure and decreased levels of cholesterol and triglycerides.[94][95]

Technology[edit]

Technology companies have been advertising their products as helpful for reducing loneliness at least as far back as 1905; records exist of early telephones being presented as a way for isolated farmers to reduce loneliness. Technological solutions for loneliness have been suggested much more frequently since the development of the internet, and especially since loneliness became a more prominent public health issue at around 2017. Solutions have been proposed by existing tech companies, and by start-ups dedicated to loneliness reduction.[1][96]

Solutions that has become available since 2017 tend to fall under 4 different approaches. 1) Mindfulness apps that aim to change an individual's attitude towards loneliness, emphasising possible benefits, and trying to shift towards an experience more similar to voluntary solitude. 2) Apps that warn users when they're starting to spend too much time online, which is based on research findings that moderate use of digital technology can be beneficial, but that excessive time online can increase loneliness. 3) Apps that help people connect with others, including to arrange real life meetups. 4) AI related technologies that provide digital companionship. Such companions can be conventionally virtual (having existence only when their application is switched on), can have an independent digital life (their program may run all the time in the cloud, allowing them to interact with the user across different platforms like Instagram & Twitter in similar ways to how a real human friend might behave), or can have a physical presence like a Pepper robot. As far back as the 1960s, some individuals had stated they prefer communicating with the ELIZA computer program rather than regular human beings. AI driven applications available in the 2020s are considerably more advanced, able to remember previous conversations, with some ability to sense emotional states, and to tailor their interaction accordingly. An example of a start-up working on such technology is Edward Saatchis Fable studio. Inspired by the Joi character in Blade Runner 2049, Saatchi seeks to create digital friends that can help alleviate loneliness. As they'll be in some senses beyond human, untainted by negative motivators like greed or envy, and with enhanced powers of attention, they may be able to help people be kinder and gentler to others. And so assist with loneliness relief on a society wide level, as well as directly with individuals.[1][97][98][96]

Religion[edit]

Studies have found an association with religion and the reduction of loneliness, especially among the elderly. The studies sometimes include caveats, such as that religions with strong behavioural prescriptions can have isolating effects. In the 21st century, numerous religious organisations have begun to undertake efforts explicitly focusing on loneliness reduction. Religious figures have also played a role in raising awareness of the problem of loneliness, for example, His Holy Father Pope Francis said in 2013 that loneliness of the old (along with youth unemployment) were the most serious evils of the age.[99][100][101][88][6]

Others[edit]

Nostalgia has also been found to have a restorative effect, counteracting loneliness by increasing perceived social support.[102] Vivek Murthy has stated that the most generally available cure for loneliness is human connection. Murthy argues that regular people have a vital role to play as individuals in reducing loneliness for themselves and others, in part by greater emphases on kindness and on nurturing relationships with others.[1]

Effectiveness[edit]

Professor Stella Mills has suggested that while social loneliness can be relatively easy to address with group activities and other measures that help build connections between people, effective intervention against emotional loneliness can be more challenging. Mills argues that such intervention is more likely to succeed for individuals who are in the early stages of loneliness, before the effects caused by chronic loneliness are deeply engrained.[88]

A 2010 meta-study compared the effectiveness of four interventions: improving social skills, enhancing social support, increasing opportunities for social interaction, and addressing abnormal social cognition (faulty patterns of thoughts, such as the hyper-vigilance often caused by chronic loneliness ). The results of the study indicated that all interventions were effective in reducing loneliness, possibly with the exception of social skill training. Results of the meta-analysis suggest that correcting maladaptive social cognition offers the best chance of reducing loneliness.[8] A 2019 umbrella review of systematic reviews focussing on the effectiveness of loneliness relief efforts aimed just at older people, also found that those targeting social cognition were most effective.[9]

A 2018 overview of systematic reviews concerning the effectiveness of loneliness interventions, found that generally, there is little solid evidence that intervention are effective. Though they also found no reason to believe the various types of intervention did any harm, except they cautioned against the excessive use of digital technology. The authors called for more rigorous, best practice compliant research in future studies, and with more attention to the cost of interventions.[18]

History[edit]

Loneliness has been appeared in literature throughout the ages, as far back as Epic of Gilgamesh.[2][4] Yet according to Fay Bound Alberti, it was only around the year 1800 that the word began to widely denote a negative condition. Earlier dictionary definitions of loneliness equated it with solitude – a state that was often seen as positive, unless taken to excess. From about 1800, the word loneliness began to acquire its modern definition as a painful subjective condition. This may due to economic and social changes arising out the Enlightenment. Such as alienation and increased interpersonal competition, along with a reduction in the number of people that would enjoy close and enduring connections with the people living in close proximity with them, as may for example have been the case for modernising pastoral villages.[103][6] Despite growing awareness of the problem of loneliness, widespread social recognition of the problem was limited, and scientific study remained sparse, until the last quarter of the twentieth century. One of the earliest studies of loneliness was published by Joseph Harold Sheldon in 1948.[104] The 1950 book The Lonely Crowd helped further raise the profile of loneliness among academics. For the general public, awareness was raised by the 1966 Beatles song "Eleanor Rigby".[6]

According to Eugene Garfield, it was Robert S. Weiss who brought the attention of scientists to the topic of loneliness, with his 1973 publication of Loneliness: The experience of emotional and social isolation.[105] Before Weiss's publication, what few studies of loneliness existed were mostly focussed on older adults. Following Weis's work, and especially after the 1978 publication of the UCLA Loneliness Scale, scientific interest in the topic has broadened and deepened considerably, with tens of thousands of academic studies having been carried to investigate loneliness just among students, with many more focussed on other subgroups, and on whole populations.[106][5][6][56]

Concern among the general public over loneliness increased in the decades since "Eleanor Rigby"'s release; by 2018 government-backed anti-loneliness campaigns had been launched in countries including the UK, Denmark and Australia.[50]

See also[edit]

Notes and references[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Vivek Murthy (2020). Together: The Healing Power of Human Connection in a Sometimes Lonely World. Harper Wave. pp. 103–113, 255–62, 185–281, passim. ISBN 978-0062913296.
  2. ^ a b c d Ben Lazare Mijuskovic (2012). Loneliness in Philosophy, Psychology, and Literature. iUniverse. pp. 60–69. ISBN 978-1-4697-8934-7.
  3. ^ Michele A. Carter (2003). "Abiding Loneliness: An Existential Perspective on Loneliness". Park Ridge Center for Health, Faith, And Ethics. Philosophical Society.com. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  4. ^ a b c d e John G. McGraw (2010). Intimacy and Isolation. Rodopi. pp. 107–149. 417–420. ISBN 978-9042031395.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Ami Sha'ked; Ami Rokach, eds. (2015). "3,4, 9,12, 16". Addressing Loneliness: Coping, Prevention and Clinical Interventions. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-1138026216.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Fay Bound Alberti (2019). A Biography of Loneliness: The History of an Emotion. Oxford University Press. pp. 1–40, 61–83. ISBN 9780198811343.
  7. ^ a b Tim Adams (28 February 2016). "John Cacioppo: 'Loneliness is like an iceberg – it goes deeper than we can see'". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 May 2020.
  8. ^ a b c d Masi, C. M.; Chen, H.-Y.; Hawkley, L. C.; Cacioppo, J. T. (2010). "A Meta-Analysis of Interventions to Reduce Loneliness". Personality and Social Psychology Review. 15 (3): 219–66. doi:10.1177/1088868310377394. PMC 3865701. PMID 20716644.
  9. ^ a b Mary-AnnJarvisa; Anita Padmanabhanunnib; Yusentha Balakrishnac; Jennifer Chippsd (2020). "The effectiveness of interventions addressing loneliness in older persons: An umbrella review". International Journal of Africa Nursing Sciences. 12: 100177. doi:10.1016/j.ijans.2019.100177.
  10. ^ Parker, Pope (1 December 2009). "Why loneliness can be contagious". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 28 March 2013. Retrieved 10 December 2012.
  11. ^ Christakis, N.A.; Fowler, J.H. (2013). "Social contagion theory: examining dynamic social networks and human behavior". Statistics in Medicine. 32 (4): 556–577. doi:10.1002/sim.5408. PMC 3830455. PMID 22711416.
  12. ^ Cacioppo JT, Fowler JH, Christakis NA (2009). "Alone in the crowd: the structure and spread of loneliness in a large social network". Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 97 (6): 977–991. doi:10.1037/a0016076. PMC 2792572. PMID 19968414.
  13. ^ Hughes, Carole (1999). The relationship of use of the Internet and loneliness among college students (PhD Thesis). Boston College. OCLC 313894784.[page needed]
  14. ^ Sum, Shima; Mathews, R. Mark; Hughes, Ian; Campbell, Andrew (2008). "Internet Use and Loneliness in Older Adults". CyberPsychology & Behavior. 11 (2): 208–11. doi:10.1089/cpb.2007.0010. PMID 18422415. S2CID 206156298.
  15. ^ Shaw, Lindsay H.; Gant, Larry M. (2002). "In Defense of the Internet: The Relationship between Internet Communication and Depression, Loneliness, Self-Esteem, and Perceived Social Support". CyberPsychology & Behavior. 5 (2): 157–71. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.563.2946. doi:10.1089/109493102753770552. PMID 12025883.
  16. ^ "Is the Internet the Secret to Happiness?". Time. 14 May 2010. Archived from the original on 25 April 2012. Retrieved 25 March 2012.
  17. ^ Moretta, T.; Buodo, G. (2020). "Problematic Internet Use and Loneliness: How Complex Is the Relationship? A Short Literature Review". Current Addiction Reports. 7 (2): 125–136. doi:10.1007/s40429-020-00305-z. S2CID 212620349.
  18. ^ a b c d e Christina Victor; Louise Mansfield; Tess Kay; Norma Daykin; Jack Lane; Lily Grigsby Duffy; Alan Tomlinson; Catherine Meads (October 2018). "An overview of reviews: the effectiveness of interventions to address loneliness at all stages of the life-course" (PDF). whatworkswellbeing.org. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
  19. ^ Nowland, R.; Necka, E. A.; Cacioppo, J. T. (2018). "Loneliness and Social Internet Use: Pathways to Reconnection in a Digital World?". Perspectives on Psychological Science. 13 (1): 70–87. doi:10.1177/1745691617713052. PMID 28937910.
  20. ^ Jianjun Gao, Lea K Davis, Amy B Hart, Sandra Sanchez-Roige, Lide Han, John T Cacioppo, Abraham A Palmer (2016). "Genome-Wide Association Study of Loneliness Demonstrates a Role for Common Variation". Neuropsychopharmacology. 42 (4): 811–821. doi:10.1038/npp.2016.197. PMC 5312064. PMID 27629369.CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  21. ^ Boomsma, Dorret I.; Willemsen, Gonneke; Dolan, Conor V.; Hawkley, Louise C.; Cacioppo, John T. (2005). "Genetic and Environmental Contributions to Loneliness in Adults: The Netherlands Twin Register Study". Behavior Genetics. 35 (6): 745–52. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.453.498. doi:10.1007/s10519-005-6040-8. PMID 16273322. S2CID 674438.
  22. ^ Lowrey, Annie (26 May 2011). "Long commutes cause obesity, neck pain, loneliness, divorce, stress, and insomnia". Slate. Retrieved 19 January 2020.
  23. ^ Paumgarten, Nick (9 April 2007). "There and Back Again". The New Yorker. Retrieved 19 January 2020.
  24. ^ a b Weiss, R.S. Loneliness: The Experience of Emotional and Social Isolation; The MIT Press: Cambridge, MA, USA, 1973.
  25. ^ Loneliness at Universities: Determinants of Emotional and Social Loneliness among Students , Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2018, 15(9), 1865; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15091865 , by Katharina Diehl , Charlotte Jansen , Kamila Ishchanova and Jennifer Hilger-Kolb
  26. ^ a b O'Súilleabháin, Páraic S.; Gallagher, Stephen; Steptoe, Andrew (2019). "Loneliness, Living Alone, and All-Cause Mortality: The Role of Emotional and Social Loneliness in the Elderly During 19 Years of Follow-Up". Psychosomatic Medicine. 81 (6): 521–526. doi:10.1097/PSY.0000000000000710. hdl:10344/8038. ISSN 0033-3174. PMC 6615929. PMID 31094903.
  27. ^ Different sources of loneliness are associated with different forms of psychopathology in adolescence , Journal of Research in Personality Volume 45, Issue 2, April 2011, Pages 233-237 , https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jrp.2010.12.005 ; by Mathias Lasgaard ,Luc Goossens, Rikke HolmBramsen, Tea Trillingsgaard and Ask Elklita
  28. ^ Lesch, Elmien; Casper, Rozanne; van der Watt, Alberta S. J. (2016). "Romantic relationships and loneliness in a group of South African postgraduate students". South African Review of Sociology. 47 (4): 22–39. doi:10.1080/21528586.2016.1182442. ISSN 2152-8586. S2CID 152149835.
  29. ^ Shah, Syed Ghulam Sarwar; Nogueras, David; van Woerden, Hugo Cornelis; Kiparoglou, Vasiliki (5 November 2020). "The COVID-19 Pandemic: A Pandemic of Lockdown Loneliness and the Role of Digital Technology". Journal of Medical Internet Research. 22 (11): e22287. doi:10.2196/22287. ISSN 1438-8871.
  30. ^ Peplau, L.A.; Perlman, D. (1982). "Perspectives on loneliness". In Peplau, Letitia Anne; Perlman, Daniel (eds.). Loneliness: A sourcebook of current theory, research and therapy. New York: John Wiley and Sons. pp. 1–18. ISBN 978-0-471-08028-2.
  31. ^ Suedfeld, P. (1989). "Past the reflection and through the looking-glass: Extending loneliness research". In Hojat, M.; Crandall, R. (eds.). Loneliness: Theory, research and applications. Newbury Park, California: Sage Publications. pp. 51–6.
  32. ^ Bicudo de Castro, Vicente; Muskat, Matthias (4 April 2020). "Inverted Crusoeism: Deliberately marooning yourself on an island" (PDF). Shima: The International Journal of Research into Island Cultures. 14 (1). doi:10.21463/shima.14.1.16.
  33. ^ Larson, R.; Csikszentmihalyi, M.; Graef, R. (1982). "Time alone in daily experience: Loneliness or renewal?". In Peplau, Letitia Anne; Perlman, Daniel (eds.). Loneliness: A sourcebook of current theory, research and therapy. New York: John Wiley and Sons. pp. 41–53. ISBN 978-0-471-08028-2.
  34. ^ Suedfeld, P. (1982). "Aloneness as a healing experience". In Peplau, Letitia Anne; Perlman, Daniel (eds.). Loneliness: A sourcebook of current theory, research and therapy. New York: John Wiley and Sons. pp. 54–67. ISBN 978-0-471-08028-2.
  35. ^ de Jong-Gierveld, J.; Raadschelders, J. (1982). "Types of loneliness". In Peplau, Letitia Anne; Perlman, Daniel (eds.). Loneliness: A sourcebook of current theory, research and therapy. New York: John Wiley and Sons. pp. 105–19. ISBN 978-0-471-08028-2.
  36. ^ Duck, S. (1992). Human relations (2nd ed.). London: Sage Publications.
  37. ^ An Existential View of Loneliness Archived 27 September 2010 at the Wayback Machine – Carter, Michele; excerpt from Abiding Loneliness: An Existential Perspective, Park Ridge Center, September 2000
  38. ^ Tomšik, Robert (2015). Relationship of loneliness and meaning of life among adolescents. In Current Trends in Educational Science and Practice VIII : International Proceedings of Scientific Studies. Nitra: UKF. pp. 66–7. ISBN 978-80-558-0813-0.
  39. ^ Love, H. K. (1 January 2001). ""SPOILED IDENTITY": Stephen Gordon's Loneliness and the Difficulties of Queer History". GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies. 7 (4): 487–519. doi:10.1215/10642684-7-4-487. ISSN 1064-2684. S2CID 145677903.
  40. ^ Bost, Darius (2019). Evidence of Being. University of Chicago Press. doi:10.7208/chicago/9780226589961.001.0001. ISBN 9780226589824.
  41. ^ a b Andrew Stickley; Ai Koyanagi; Bayard Roberts; Erica Richardson; Pamela Abbott; Sergei Tumanov; Martin McKee (2013). "Loneliness: Its Correlates and Association with Health Behaviours and Outcomes in Nine Countries of the Former Soviet Union". PLOS ONE. 8 (7): e67978. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0067978. PMC 3701665. PMID 23861843.
  42. ^ Comber, Cathy. "Ms". loneliness.org.nz. Archived from the original on 8 October 2018. Retrieved 8 October 2018.
  43. ^ a b c Manuela Barretoa, Christina Victor, Claudia Hammond, Alice Ecclesd, Matt T.Richins, Pamela Qualter (2020). "Loneliness around the world: Age, gender, and cultural differences in loneliness". Personality and Individual Differences: 110066. doi:10.1016/j.paid.2020.110066. ISSN 0191-8869.CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  44. ^ Loneliness – What characteristics and circumstances are associated with feeling lonely? Archived 25 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine Analysis of characteristics and circumstances associated with loneliness in England using the Community Life Survey, 2016 to 2017. Published by the Office for National Statistics. Published 10 April 2018. Retrieved 25 July 2018.
  45. ^ Diehl K, Jansen C, Ishchanova K, Hilger-Kolb J. Loneliness at Universities: Determinants of Emotional and Social Loneliness among Students. Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2018 Aug 29;15(9):1865. doi: 10.3390/ijerph15091865. PMID 30158447; PMCID: PMC6163695.
  46. ^ Gabrielle Denman (18 November 2019). "All the lonely people – the epidemic of loneliness and its consequences". Social Science Works. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
  47. ^ a b Julianne Holt-Lunstad; Timothy B. Smith; J. Bradley Layton (2010). "Social Relationships and Mortality Risk: A Meta-analytic Review". PLOS Medicine. 7 (7): e1000316. doi:10.1371/journal.pmed.1000316. PMC 2910600. PMID 20668659.
  48. ^ Eric Klinenberg (9 February 2018). "Is Loneliness a Health Epidemic?". The New York Times. Retrieved 1 March 2020. But is loneliness, as many political officials and pundits are warning, a growing "health epidemic"?”
  49. ^ "All the Lonely Americans?". United States Congress Joint Economic Committee. 22 August 2018. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
  50. ^ a b c "Loneliness is a serious public-health problem". The Economist. 1 September 2018. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
  51. ^ "Is there a loneliness epidemic?". University of Oxford. 11 December 2019. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  52. ^ Sometimes called the "reaffiliation motive", e.g. see Loneliness across the life span
  53. ^ a b Carin Rubenstein, Phillip R. Shaver (1982). In search of intimacy. Delacorte Press. pp. 3, 152, 172 260, passim. ISBN 0385284802.
  54. ^ Brent Crane (March 2017). "The Virtues of Isolation". The Atlantic. Retrieved 5 April 2020.
  55. ^ John G. McGraw (1986). Loneliness and spiritual growth. Religious Education Press. pp. passim. ISBN 0891350551.
  56. ^ a b Cody Delistraty (July 2016). "Only the lonely". aeon. Retrieved 5 April 2020.
  57. ^ a b c d N. Leigh-Hunta; D. Bagguleyb; K. Bashb; V. Turnerb; S. Turnbullb; N. Valtortac; W. Caan (2017). "An overview of systematic reviews on the public health consequences of social isolation and loneliness". PLOS ONE.
  58. ^ "Loneliness and Isolation: Modern Health Risks". The Pfizer Journal. IV (4). 2000. Archived from the original on 28 January 2006.
  59. ^ a b c Cacioppo, J.; Hawkley, L. (2010). "Loneliness Matters: A Theorectical and Empirical Review of Consequences and Mechanisms". Annals of Behavioral Medicine. 40 (2): 218–227. doi:10.1007/s12160-010-9210-8. PMC 3874845. PMID 20652462.
  60. ^ "Chronic stress puts your health at risk". Archived from the original on 9 May 2017. Retrieved 7 June 2018.
  61. ^ a b The Dangers of Loneliness – Marano, Hara Estroff; Psychology Today Thursday 21 August 2003
  62. ^ Shelkova, Polina (2010). "Loneliness". Archived from the original on 30 May 2012. Retrieved 14 July 2013.
  63. ^ "APA Dictionary of Psychology". dictionary.apa.org. Retrieved 3 July 2020.
  64. ^ Marano, Hara. "The Dangers of Loneliness". Retrieved 10 December 2012.
  65. ^ Hawkley, Louise C; Cacioppo, John T (2003). "Loneliness and pathways to disease". Brain, Behavior, and Immunity. 17 (1): 98–105. doi:10.1016/S0889-1591(02)00073-9. PMID 12615193. S2CID 1336958.
  66. ^ Masterson, James F.; Klein, Ralph (1995). Disorders of the Self: Secret Pure Schizoid Cluster Disorder. pp. 25–7. Klein was Clinical Director of the Masterson Institute and Assistant Professor of Psychiatry at the Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, New York
  67. ^ a b Mark Berman (9 June 2015). "Kalief Browder and what we do and don't know about solitary confinement in the U.S." The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 22 April 2019. Retrieved 14 March 2019.
  68. ^ "Testimony of Professor Craig Haney; Senate Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights, and Human Rights Hearing on Solitary Confinement" (PDF). United States Senate. 19 June 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 September 2018. Retrieved 14 March 2019.
  69. ^ Loneliness linked to major life setbacks for millennials, study says Archived 25 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine. The Guardian. Author – Nicola Davis. Published 24 April 2018. Retrieved 25 July 2018.
  70. ^ Lonely young adults in modern Britain: findings from an epidemiological cohort study Archived 25 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine. Psychological Medicine. Authors – Timothy Matthews (a1), Andrea Danese (a1) (a2), Avshalom Caspi (a1) (a3), Helen L. Fisher (a1), Sidra Goldman-Mellor (a4), Agnieszka Kepa (a1), Terrie E. Moffitt (a1) (a3), Candice L. Odgers (a5) (a6) and Louise Arseneault (a1). Published online on 24 April 2018. Published by Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 25 July 2018.
  71. ^ Jaremka, L.M.; Andridge, R.R.; Fagundes, C.P.; Alfano, C.M.; Povoski, S.P.; Lipari, A.M.; Agnese, D.M.; Arnold, M.W.; Farrar, W.B.; Yee, L.D. Carson III; Bekaii-Saab, T.; Martin Jr, E.W.; Schmidt, C.R.; Kiecolt-Glaser, J.K. (2014). "Pain, depression, and fatigue: Loneliness as a longitudinal risk factor". Health Psychology. 38 (9): 1310–1317. doi:10.1037/a0034012. PMC 3992976. PMID 23957903.
  72. ^ The Washington Post (17 April 2017). "All you need is love – and funding: 79-year-old Harvard study of human happiness may lose grant money". National Post. Retrieved 3 December 2020.
  73. ^ Nobel, Jeremy; MD; MPH; Founder; President; Art, Foundation for; Healing (25 September 2018). "Forging Connection Against Loneliness". AFSP. Retrieved 13 December 2019.
  74. ^ a b Stravynski, Ariel; Boyer, Richard (2001). "Loneliness in Relation to Suicide Ideation and Parasuicide: A Population-Wide Study". Suicide and Life-Threatening Behavior. 31 (1): 32–40. doi:10.1521/suli.31.1.32.21312. ISSN 1943-278X. PMID 11326767.
  75. ^ a b c "Young people and suicide". Samaritans. Retrieved 13 December 2019.
  76. ^ Noreena Hertz (25 September 2020). "Why loneliness fuels populism". Financial Times. Retrieved 8 December 2020.
  77. ^ Noreena Hertz (2020). "Chapt. 3 'The lonely mouse', 4 'Sex, Love and Robots'". The Lonely Century: Coming Together in a World that's Pulling Apart. Sceptre. ISBN 978-1529329254.
  78. ^ Hannah Arendt (2020). "Chapt. 13". The Origins of Totalitarianism. Penguin Classics. ISBN 9780241316757. [Totalitarianism] bases itself on loneliness, on the experience of not belonging to the world at all, which is among the most radical and desperate experiences of man
  79. ^ Cacioppo, John; Patrick, William, Loneliness: Human Nature and the Need for Social Connection, New York : W.W. Norton & Co., 2008. ISBN 978-0-393-06170-3. Science of Loneliness.com Archived 1 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine
  80. ^ Jaremka, Lisa M.; Fagundes, Christopher P.; Glaser, Ronald; Bennett, Jeanette M.; Malarkey, William B.; Kiecolt-Glaser, Janice K. (2013). "Loneliness predicts pain, depression, and fatigue: Understanding the role of immune dysregulation". Psychoneuroendocrinology. 38 (8): 1310–7. doi:10.1016/j.psyneuen.2012.11.016. PMC 3633610. PMID 23273678.
  81. ^ Jaremka, Lisa M.; Fagundes, Christopher P.; Peng, Juan; Bennett, Jeanette M.; Glaser, Ronald; Malarkey, William B.; Kiecolt-Glaser, Janice K. (2013). "Loneliness Promotes Inflammation During Acute Stress". Psychological Science. 24 (7): 1089–97. doi:10.1177/0956797612464059. PMC 3825089. PMID 23630220.
  82. ^ Ijzerman, Hans. "Getting the cold shoulder". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 9 December 2012. Retrieved 1 November 2012.
  83. ^ "Psychotherapy". Depression.com. Archived from the original on 17 December 2009. Retrieved 29 March 2008.
  84. ^ "The Truth About Antidepressants". WebMD. Archived from the original on 10 December 2010. Retrieved 30 March 2008.
  85. ^ "Loneliness Annual Report: the first year". Government of the United Kingdom. 20 January 2020. Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  86. ^ Kerstin Gerst-Emerson and Jayani Jayawardhana (2015). "Loneliness as a Public Health Issue: The Impact of Loneliness on Health Care Utilization Among Older Adults". American Journal of Public Health. 105 (5): 1013–1019. doi:10.2105/AJPH.2014.302427. PMC 4386514. PMID 25790413.
  87. ^ Chloe Apter (13 March 2019). "The benefits of social prescribing - and a word of warning". mental health today. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  88. ^ a b c Stella Mills (6 September 2017). "Loneliness: Do Interventions Help?" (PDF). University of Chester. Retrieved 16 May 2020.
  89. ^ Beh Lih Yi (22 July 2019). "Grey fingers: Ageing Singapore uses gardening to fight loneliness". Thomson Reuters Foundation. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  90. ^ Viola Stefanello (19 October 2019). "Lonely in Berlin: German capital mulls Commissioner for Loneliness". Euronews. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  91. ^ Grace Birnstengel (17 January 2020). "What Has the U.K.'s Minister of Loneliness Done to Date?". Next Avenue. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  92. ^ "Loneliness Annual Report: the first year". Government of the United Kingdom. 20 January 2020. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  93. ^ Jenny Anderson (9 October 2018). "Loneliness is bad for our health. Now governments around the world are finally tackling it". Quartz. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  94. ^ Health Benefits of Pets Archived 15 March 2017 at the Wayback Machine (from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention). Retrieved 14 November 2007.
  95. ^ Ann Robinson (17 May 2020). "'Dogs have a magic effect': how pets can improve our mental health". The Guardian. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  96. ^ a b Natasha Mascarenhas (10 September 2019). "Loneliness in Tech: Nothing Beats Vulnerability, Even If It's Tech Generated". Crunchbase. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  97. ^ Oliver Balch (20 May 2020). "AI and me: friendship chatbots are on the rise, but is there a gendered design flaw?". The Guardian. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  98. ^ James Titcomb (23 February 2020). "Meet the Saatchi heir building 'virtual friends' to combat loneliness". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  99. ^ Eugenio Scalfari (1 October 2013). "The Pope: how the Church will change". la Repubblica. Retrieved 18 May 2020.
  100. ^ Doman, LCH; Roux,A (2010). "The causes of loneliness and the factors that contribute towards it - A literature review". Tydskrift vir Geesteswetenskappe. 50: 216–228.
  101. ^ Johnson, D. P.; Mullins, L. C. (1989). "Religiosity and Loneliness Among the Elderly". Journal of Applied Gerontology. 8: 110–31. doi:10.1177/073346488900800109. S2CID 145242343.
  102. ^ Zhou, Xinyue; Sedikides, Constantine; Wildschut, Tim; Gao, Ding-Guo (2008). "Counteracting Loneliness: On the Restorative Function of Nostalgia" (PDF). Psychological Science. 19 (10): 1023–9. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9280.2008.02194.x. PMID 19000213. S2CID 45398320.
  103. ^ Pankaj Mishra (2017). Age of Anger. Penguin Books. pp. 75, 172, 187–188, 269–270, 336–338. ISBN 9780141984087.
  104. ^ Sheldon, J.H. (1948). "The Social Medicine of Old Age. Report of an Enquiry in Wolverhampton". Journal of Gerontology. 3 (4): 306–308.
  105. ^ Eugene Garfield (3 February 1986). "The Loneliness Researcher Is Not so Lonely Anymore" (PDF). Essays of an information scientist. University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 1 March 2020.
  106. ^ Anderson, Keith A. (2019). "The Virtual Care Farm: A Preliminary Evaluation of an Innovative Approach to Addressing Loneliness and Building Community through Nature and Technology". Activities, Adaptation & Aging. 43 (4): 334–344. doi:10.1080/01924788.2019.1581024. S2CID 86570263.

External links[edit]

  • Quotations related to Loneliness at Wikiquote
  • Quotations related to Solitude at Wikiquote
  • The dictionary definition of loneliness at Wiktionary