Penticton Herald

Loneliness a concern in Canada as well as U.K. U.K. appointmen­t of ‘loneliness minister’ shines spotlight on issue

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VANCOUVER — The appointmen­t of a minister of loneliness in the United Kingdom to tackle social isolation is an acknowledg­ment of a problem Canadian experts say needs to be addressed here as well.

B.C.’s seniors’ advocate Isobel Mackenzie said whether government interventi­on is the right approach remains to be seen, but it at least highlights social isolation as an important issue that merits public discourse.

“It’s getting the conversati­on going,” Mackenzie said. “It’s something a lot of people don’t think about who aren’t isolated and lonely . . . . They don’t think about the person who is not reaching out to them.”

Andrew Wister, director of the gerontolog­y research centre at Simon Fraser University in B.C., said studies have found one in five Canadians experience some degree of loneliness or social isolation.

Social isolation can have serious repercussi­ons, including impacts on a person’s mental health and mortality, and Canada could learn from the U.K.’s approach in raising discourse on the issue, he said.

U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May announced Wednesday the creation of a ministeria­l lead on loneliness. It marks the government’s first step in implementi­ng recommenda­tions made by a commission that found rates of loneliness are “worryingly high” across all age groups.

In addition to developing a strategy to address the issue, Britain’s new minister will work across government department­s to identify and support solutions that are already working and collect data to monitor progress.

Wister said a collaborat­ive approach to addressing social isolation is important because of the wide range of factors contributi­ng to the problem.

A 2017 report by Canada’s National Seniors Council, which Wister chaired, identified people living alone or in remote communitie­s, who identify as LGBTQ, have disabiliti­es and experience poverty as higher-risk groups.

Access to transporta­tion is a barrier many seniors encounter, he said, as is the availabili­ty of other health and social services.

Mackenzie said “unintended consequenc­es” of modern life, including technology, are also isolating people.

As services such as banking and grocery shopping move online, people are losing opportunit­ies to connect with one another, she said.

“We need to look at some of the decisions we are making as a society on how we are choosing to live that may be contributi­ng over time to creating the circumstan­ces that lead to loneliness and isolation —decisions like living in single-family homes in the suburbs, driving alone in cars, communicat­ing through social media rather than in person,” she said.

Loneliness and isolation are particular­ly acute among seniors over the age of 80 who experience additional challenges like the death of a spouse, Mackenzie said.

A survey conducted by her office last year found that even seniors in residentia­l care facilities in B.C. reported feeling some degree of loneliness, despite being surrounded by people.

“Almost half of the people living in our care homes felt that they didn’t have a close friend or someone they could do things with,” Mackenzie said. Wister said the problem is a complex one the solve, but deserves time and attention.

Reconnecti­ng people with their communitie­s can change lives by improving the health and well being of individual­s and enriching the people around them, he said.

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