key: cord-0940335-ogs0csv0 authors: Jeste, Dilip V.; Lee, Ellen E. title: Loneliness vs. Wisdom amid Two Concurrent Pandemics of Loneliness date: 2020-09-02 journal: Am J Geriatr Psychiatry DOI: 10.1016/j.jagp.2020.08.017 sha: 93527a4fbaeb65320a8752a79c8046e140c55c70 doc_id: 940335 cord_uid: ogs0csv0 nan Today we are living in the midst of two ongoing pandemics. One of them began a couple of decades ago, with increasing social isolation and loneliness (SI/L) associated with growing social anomie resulting from progressive globalization and impossibly rapid changes in technology. This has led to a 33% increase in suicides and a 6-fold increase in the number of opioid-related deaths in the US since the late 1990s. SI/L is a major factor underlying this pandemic of deaths of despair 1 . In the UK, a new Minister of Loneliness was appointed in 2018 out of concerns about lost productivity caused by loneliness among workers. Added to this silent but dangerous pandemic of SI/L is the new pandemic of Covid-19. While most of the recent attention has understandably focused on the morbidity and mortality directly caused by the coronavirus, looming under the surface is a related iatrogenic pandemic of greater SI/L, especially among older adults, resulting from social distancing requirements to stem the spread of coronavirus. The timely and important article by Donovan and Blazer 2 on the National Academies Report on SI/L, published in this issue, provides an insightful and actionable review of SI/L among older adults. Both the authors were members of the committee that released the Report in early 2020 as the COVID-19 pandemic was beginning to spread across the world. In their review, the authors share central findings and conclusions from this influential and scholarly Report as well as how these findings may be relevant to the care and well-being of older adults during the new pandemic. As Donovan and Blazer state, while social isolation during COVID-19 can be lifesaving, it also deprives older adults of fundamental human needs for companionship and community. Altogether, this thoughtful, balanced, and forward-looking article will be of immense value to the field of geriatric psychiatry for years to come. Eventually we will develop one or more vaccines to defeat the coronavirus, as we have done with countless microorganisms over the centuries. However, how will we handle the SI/L caused by social distancing, which might continue long after the acute infectious pandemic is brought under control? What is the behavioral vaccine for the behavioral pandemic of SI/L that has been ravaging the world for over two decades? There is no simple answer to this question. However, there are some hopeful indicators supporting the potential for wisdom-based interventions. Our studies across the adult lifespan have found a consistently strong inverse correlation between wisdom and loneliness 3 . Wisdom is a complex personality trait comprised of specific componentspro-social behaviors like empathy and compassion, emotional regulation, self-reflection, decisiveness while accepting uncertainty and diversity of perspectives, as well as spirituality. Of these components, the one with the highest inverse correlation with loneliness is pro-social behaviors. Wisdom, including empathy and compassion, is potentially modifiable and can be enhanced with psychosocial interventions 4, 5 Reynolds and Blazer 6 have presented an important analogy for a complex trait like wisdom with depression interventions and neurobiological research. As they have stated eloquently, more than one treatment component may be needed to optimize health effects and elucidate mechanisms of action and underlying neurobiology. The same model should apply to SI/L, a construct with subjective and objective components, as well as cognitive, emotional, and behavioral dimensions. A meaningful approach should involve targeting an individual's distress, increasing their skills to make deeper social connections, presenting opportunities for useful interactions with others, and developing the ability to enjoy being alone, i.e., positive solitude. Some exciting genomic, brain imaging, and neurophysiological research has hinted at important overlaps between loneliness and wisdom in terms of specific brain regions involved. As an example of professional creativity in the Covid-19 era, geriatric psychiatrists are increasingly implementing technologies to provide better care to older adults. Parker, et al. 7 have reported that the Covid-19 pandemic has catalyzed the adoption of telepsychiatry at record speed in the US. In China, a coordinated national response through a collaboration among professional psychiatric, geriatric, and other interdisciplinary societies to address mental health needs was helpful in reducing psychiatric morbidity in seniors and their caregivers 8 . We believe that the scientific community has passed the first stage of research on the basic construct of SI/L, as summarized so well by Donovan and Blazer. We must now consider challenges to advancing empirical mechanistically-based neuropsychiatric research and developing efficacious and personalized interventions for SI/L. The far-reaching effects of SI/L will warrant multi-level and multi-faceted approaches to improve outcomes on individual and societal levels. Building a society that has psychosocial resilience and wisdom will require multidisciplinary expertise and widespread investment, and the NASEM Report is a critical call for action. Research in these and other related arenas will not only help mitigate the disastrous effects of SI/L during the present Covid-19 pandemic but will also address the ongoing behavioral pandemic of SI/L that has been taking a huge toll over the last 20+ years. Battling the modern behavioral epidemic of loneliness: suggestions for research and interventions Social isolation and loneliness in older adults: review and commentary of a National Academies Report Outcomes of randomized clinical trials to enhance social, emotional, and spiritual components of wisdom: a systematic review and meta-analysis A Pragmatic trial of a group intervention in senior housing communities to increase resilience High prevalence and adverse health effects of loneliness in community-dwelling adults across the lifespan: role of wisdom as a protective factor Toward a multidimensional perspective on wisdom and health-an analogy with depression intervention and neurobiological research Facing the change together: reflections of coping and resilience from American Geriatric Psychiatrists during COVID-19 Coronavirus Epidemic and Geriatric Mental Healthcare in China: How a Coordinated Response by Professional Organizations Helped Older Adults During an Unprecedented Crisis