Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

U.K. ‘Loneliness Minister' Puts Spotlight On Issue Canada Also Needs To Tackle

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Jan, 2018 12:04 PM
    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 about 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 public 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 to 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.  

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Boosts Homeowner Grant To 1.65M As Assessed Value Of Homes Rises Again

    B.C. Boosts Homeowner Grant To 1.65M As Assessed Value Of Homes Rises Again
    The British Columbia government is raising the threshold for the 2018 homeowner grant as residents receive letters this week indicating the assessed value of their homes is up again.

    B.C. Boosts Homeowner Grant To 1.65M As Assessed Value Of Homes Rises Again

    IHIT Responding To Apparent Homicide Near Metrotown Mall

    Neighbours Heard A Woman Screaming At An Apartment Building On Telford Avenue Overnight

    IHIT Responding To Apparent Homicide Near Metrotown Mall

    B.C. Latest Province To Pay For 'Abortion Pill' That Currently Costs $300

    B.C. Latest Province To Pay For 'Abortion Pill' That Currently Costs $300
    British Columbia has announced it will pay for the so-called abortion pill starting Jan. 15, becoming the sixth province to provide free access to the drug.

    B.C. Latest Province To Pay For 'Abortion Pill' That Currently Costs $300

    Ontario Man Sues Med School, Saying It Didn't Train Him Well Enough To Succeed

    Ontario Man Sues Med School, Saying It Didn't Train Him Well Enough To Succeed
    James Stuart alleges a five-year post-graduate residency program offered at the university didn't give him the necessary training to pass a certification exam and get licensed as a medical microbiologist.

    Ontario Man Sues Med School, Saying It Didn't Train Him Well Enough To Succeed

    Taxi Driver Kicked Out Teen On Rural Road In -37 C Weather In Edmonton, Mother Says

    Taxi Driver Kicked Out Teen On Rural Road In -37 C Weather In Edmonton, Mother Says
    Marci Terpsma says 19-year-old Carson was out with friends in Edmonton and got into the taxi about 11 p.m.

    Taxi Driver Kicked Out Teen On Rural Road In -37 C Weather In Edmonton, Mother Says

    Driver Faces Impaired Probe After Vancouver Firefighter Hurt As Car Drags Hose

    Driver Faces Impaired Probe After Vancouver Firefighter Hurt As Car Drags Hose
    VANCOUVER — A Vancouver firefighter is in hospital after being injured while attending a call early Tuesday.

    Driver Faces Impaired Probe After Vancouver Firefighter Hurt As Car Drags Hose