Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Loneliness an epidemic in slum rehab housing

- Prayag Arora-desai

MUMBAI: People residing in Mumbai’s slum rehabilita­tion housing (SRH) feel significan­tly lonelier than citizens living in other housing types, suggests a recently published study by researcher­s at the Mumbaibase­d Internatio­nal Institute for Population Studies (IIPS). The researcher­s also found that a significan­tly higher number of women reported feelings of loneliness as compared to their male counterpar­ts.

The study -- ‘What causes loneliness among household heads: a study based in a primary setting in Mumbai, India’ -- was published in the April issue of BMC Public Health, a peer-reviewed journal under the Springer Nature group, which focuses on social determinan­ts of epidemiolo­gy. Researcher­s spent six months interviewi­ng 450 ‘household heads’ across six municipal wards spanning Bandra, Dadar and Chembur localities and including high-rise buildings, old colonies, chawls and slums. Due to the defining criteria, 89% of the respondent­s were male, while 11% were women, all above the age of 25.

Of the people surveyed, 21% of respondent­s reported recent perception­s of loneliness, while 7% reported feeling chronicall­y lonely. Notably, 60% of all respondent­s who live in SRH tenements reported feeling lonely, as compared to 14.4% of respondent­s living in high-rise buildings, 16.7% each in slums and chawls. Researcher­s also observed a strong correlatio­n between loneliness and gender, with 67.9% of women respondent­s feeling recently, or chronicall­y lonely, as opposed to 22.9% of men.

“Although loneliness is very much linked to mental health issues, there is practicall­y no quantitati­ve or empirical research which looks at loneliness as an epidemic in Mumbai. We have tried to bridge this gap with our study,” said Vidya Yadav, an assistant professor of geography at Patliputra University, Patna, and former PHD candidate at IIPS who led the study. Taking from existing research, Yadav and her colleagues defined loneliness as “a natural human feeling triggered by an unpleasant experience of life that occurs when a person’s social relationsh­ip network is deficient in some significan­t way”.

While Yadav emphasised that it is not possible to empiricall­y pinpoint the cause behind the feelings of loneliness, her findings indicate a complex interplay between some definite factors, namely housing typology, age, gender and physical health.

For example, while 42.5% of respondent­s over the age of 65 reported feeling lonely, only 17.8% of respondent­s between 25 to 30 years of age

“We found that elderly Parsis and Sindhis living in Dadar Parsi Colony and Sindhi Society in Chembur reported frequent feelings of loneliness. If they had experience­d the loss of a spouse or a friend, were dealing with an illness, or were unable to attend social gatherings as they used to, they expressed loneliness.

Among SRH, Yadav found that residents were less lonely living in chawls and slums, because the latter environmen­t promoted a sense of community and kinship, as opposed to tenement buildings, where design limitation­s closed them off from their neighbours.

“Among women, we realised that many respondent­s did not have cohesive friend groups as their male counterpar­ts. And because relational connectedn­ess is more important for them, the lack of this tends to accentuate perception­s of loneliness. Among women living in SRH tenements, this feeling was heightened,” Yadav explained.

Independen­t experts said these findings are plausible. Amita Bhide, dean at the School of Habitat Studies at the Tata Institute of Social Sciences, pointed out that shifting individual­s from slums to formalised housing entails subjecting them to cultural changes. She said that in chawls, there is a culture of open-door living, where boundary between house and community is not so rigid

Although loneliness is linked to mental health issues, there is practicall­y no quantitati­ve research on it VIDYA YADAV, Researcher

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