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Loneliness in later life: analysis of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing Christina Victor,

Loneliness in later life: analysis of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing Christina Victor, Brunel University christina.victor@brunel.ac.uk. Overview of presentation. Project introduction Definitions & data Expectations of loneliness Prevalence of loneliness

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Loneliness in later life: analysis of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing Christina Victor,

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  1. Loneliness in later life: analysis of the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing Christina Victor, Brunel University christina.victor@brunel.ac.uk Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  2. Overview of presentation • Project introduction • Definitions & data • Expectations of loneliness • Prevalence of loneliness • Who is vulnerable to loneliness? • Loneliness: a fluid concept? Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  3. Project details • Project title:Loneliness in later life: a longitudinal analysis using the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing • Funder: Economic and Social Research Council –grant reference: ES/K004077/1 • Co-Investigator:Prof Ann Bowling • Research fellow: Dr Jitka Pitkahova • Partner: Campaign to End Loneliness • Duration: April 2013 –October 2014 Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  4. Project research questions • To understand longitudinal changes in loneliness for those aged 50+ by addressing 3 substantive research questions: • How does loneliness status change over a 10 year period? • What factors are associated with changes to feelings of loneliness over this time? • Does loneliness predict health outcomes over a 10 year period? Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  5. What is loneliness? Loneliness: the difference between desired and actual social relations (Perlman & Pelau, 1981)-either in quantity or quality of relationships (or both)-perhaps also the mode of relationships Language... has created the word "loneliness" to express the pain of being alone. And it has created the word "solitude" to express the glory of being alone.” - Paul Tillich Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  6. Data Secondary analysis – English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA) • ELSA started in 2002 and is a longitudinal study of people aged 50+ • The study is repeated every 2 years (waves 1 to 5 available) • Modelled on Health & Retirement survey in the USA • Includes bio-medical, health, psychological and social questions about ageing and later life Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  7. Measuring loneliness? Can we measure loneliness? I think it’s a very difficult thing to quantify, ….And I think perhaps it is something which you can’t quantify because it is something which is within oneself perhaps, one’s outlook on life. (F aged 67 married) Can we measure it if we can’t talk about it? Some argue that language can never convey all that is intended, by words such as loneliness “even if the other manages to visit for a moment, he can never stay” (Mijuskovic, 2012, p67). Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  8. Measuring loneliness Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  9. Characterising loneliness • Loneliness an opportunity for personal growth • Loneliness as pathological • Associated with high levels of stigma, stereotyping & ‘othering’ of older people as excluded from society • Seen as being a key problem of ‘old age’ Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  10. This is not new... ‘’A distressing feature of old age is loneliness. All who have done welfare work among the old have found it the most common, if at the same time the most imponderable, of the ills from which the aged suffer, and its frequency was amply confirmed by our study’’ (Rowntree, 1947,52) Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  11. Why are we interested in loneliness? “Social relationships, or the relative lack thereof, constitute a major risk factor for health—rivaling the effect of well established health risk factors such as cigarette smoking, blood pressure, blood lipids, obesity and physical activity” House, Landis, & Umberson; Science 1988 “Being isolated shortens life and increases disability. It is equivalent to 15 cigarettes a day.”Duncan Selbie, Chief Executive of Public Health England Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  12. Beliefs & expectations • % expecting to get more lonely with age • % agreeing old age is a time of loneliness Source: ELSA Wave 2 analysis Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  13. Loneliness: a self fulfilling prophesy? & • % lonely by expectation of loneliness • % of those who are lonely by expectation of loneliness in old age Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  14. Prevalence of loneliness Source: Victor & Yang, 2012 Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  15. Prevalence of loneliness Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  16. ‘Risk factors’ for loneliness Large number of risk factors for loneliness – focus on vulnerability, NOT protective factors • Vulnerability = widowhood, time alone, expectations of health in old age, psychological ill health, perceived health, perceived increase in loneliness • Protective = increased age, education Note: the presence of a risk factor does not guarantee loneliness, for example 40% of those widowed in ELSA become lonely but 60% do not Pets not the answer! Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  17. Loneliness across Europe 2004 2011 Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  18. Loneliness and ethnicity % lonely Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  19. Longitudinal changes in loneliness? * 8 pathways for UCLA scale and 22 for self rating Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  20. Longitudinal changes in loneliness? Fluctuating pattern of loneliness 0=not lonely 1=lonely Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  21. Variations in loneliness? Loneliness described as both temporal & spatially experienced. ’I'm lonely of a night. ‘’(Man 16) ‘’Such a lonely life … Saturdays and Sundays are a bit dead for me…’’ (Woman 21) ‘’So long [Sunday] and so lonely.’’ ‘’I never sat on my own as my husband was always there’’ (Woman 9) ’’I was always sat in that chair there and whenever I looked up from here she was there. But when she'd gone she was not ‘’ (Man 8). Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  22. Loneliness is not at a given time. It comes and it goes.” (73 yr old widow) 0 – Never 1 – Rarely 2 - Sometimes 3 – Often 4 – Most of the time Source Sullivan and Victor 2013 Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  23. It comes and it goes... 0 – Never 1 – Rarely 2 - Sometimes 3 – Often 4 – Most of the time Source Sullivan and Victor 2013 Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

  24. Back by popular request! christina.victor@brunel.ac.uk Campaign to End Loneliness Seminar December 2013

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