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  • 'Nowadays you don't even see your neighbours': loneliness in the everyday lives of older Australians

    Author(s)
    Stanley, Mandy
    Moyle, Wendy
    Ballantyne, Alison
    Jaworski, Katrina
    Corlis, Megan
    Oxlade, Deborah
    Stoll, Andrew
    Young, Beverley
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Moyle, Wendy
    Stanley, Mandy
    Year published
    2010
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    Loneliness is a pressing social issue for older people globally. Despite this, there is a paucity of studies on how older people themselves perceive loneliness and how service providers can support them. This study sought to address the gap using in-depth and semi-structured interviews with 60 older people and eight focus groups with aged care service providers in Australia in 2007. A purposive sampling strategy was employed to incorporate maximum participant variation. People 65 years and over were recruited from four large service providers in two Australian states. Our findings show that loneliness is influenced ...
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    Loneliness is a pressing social issue for older people globally. Despite this, there is a paucity of studies on how older people themselves perceive loneliness and how service providers can support them. This study sought to address the gap using in-depth and semi-structured interviews with 60 older people and eight focus groups with aged care service providers in Australia in 2007. A purposive sampling strategy was employed to incorporate maximum participant variation. People 65 years and over were recruited from four large service providers in two Australian states. Our findings show that loneliness is influenced by private, relational and temporal dimensions and whether older people feel that they have, or are seen by others as having, a sense of connectedness with the wider community. Participants expressed the importance of maintaining social contact and having a sense of connection and belonging to the community. Our study highlights both the significance of gathering the views of older people to generate an understanding about loneliness and the need to recognise loneliness as a diverse and complex experience, bound to the context in which it is understood and perceived and not synonymous with social isolation. Such an understanding can be used to both evaluate and improve upon programmes that address loneliness and to help maintain an integration of older people in the community.
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    Journal Title
    Health and Social Care in the Community
    Volume
    18
    Issue
    4
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2524.2010.00923.x
    Subject
    Aged care nursing
    Social work
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/32223
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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