The Free Press Journal

Older adults’ mental health worst hit in pandemic

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As mental health issues become a big burden in the ongoing global health crisis, researcher­s say that older adults experience­d greater depression and loneliness during the Covid-19 pandemic. “What we found is the pandemic was associated with worse mental health outcomes for many older adults,” study author

Anne Krendl from Indiana University in the

US, said in a paper published in the Journal of Gerontolog­y: Series B.

The research team examined whether social isolation due to the Covid-19 shelter-in-place orders was associated with greater loneliness and greater depression for older adults, and, if so, whether declines in social engagement or relationsh­ip strength moderated that relationsh­ip.

Researcher­s compared personal social networks, subjective loneliness and depression of 93 older adults in the Bloomingto­n community, six to nine months prior to the pandemic and from late April to late May when most people were under stay-at-home orders. Two-thirds (68 per cent) of older adults reported spending less time than before with people they loved, according to the study, and 79 per cent felt like their social life decreased or was negatively affected by Covid-19. However, 60 per cent reported spending somewhat or much more time reconnecti­ng or catching up with people they cared about and 78 per cent were using some form of internet technology to keep in touch during the pandemic. Research has shown that loneliness is associated with a number of negative outcomes for older adults, including higher rates of depression and higher mortality, while closeness to individual­s in their networks can result in greater emotional well-being.

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