The
High Price of Loneliness (By JUDITH GRAHAM) Loneliness
stings at
any age. But in older people, it can have serious health
consequences, raising
the risks of an earlier-than-expected death and the loss of physical
functioning, according to a study published on Monday. @, ~ing = ,which is ~ing = , and it is
~ing The
report, in the Archives of Internal Medicine, is the largest yet to tease out the impact of
loneliness on people in their later years. Geriatricians at the University of
California, San Francisco, asked 1,604 adults age 60 and older how often they
felt isolated or left out, or lacked companionship. The researchers were
attempting to quantify the feeling of loneliness —
a sense of not having meaningful contact with others, accompanied
by painful distress. @yet: @tease something out: @quantify: #“accompanied” modifies “loneliness” which is “a
sense of ~ with others” in apposition. Answers
were recorded in 2002 and every two years after through 2008. The number of
older adults who reported feeling lonely — just over 43 percent — didn’t change
significantly over that period, according to Dr. Carla Perissinotto, an
assistant clinical professor at U.C.S.F. and the study’s lead author. About 13
percent of older adults said they were often lonely, while 30
percent said loneliness was sometimes an issue. # 13 percent (o) / 13 percents (x) What
did change over the six-year
period was the health status of elderly men and women
who felt isolated and unhappy. By 2008, 24.8
percent of seniors in this group reported declines in their ability to perform
the so-called
activities of daily living — to bathe, dress, eat, toilet and get
up from a chair or a bed on their own. Among those free of loneliness, only
12.5 percent reported such declines. Lonely older adults also were 45
percent more likely to die than seniors who felt meaningfully
connected with others, even
after results were adjusted for factors like depression, socioeconomic
status and existing health conditions. @even after = even though The
emphasis on meaningful connections goes to the heart of what loneliness is and
is not. It is not the same thing as being alone: 62.5 percent of older adults
who reported being lonely in this new study were married. Nor is it simply a paucity of social contacts.
As has been observed many times, people can feel lonely even when surrounded by
others if their interactions lack emotional depth and resonance. Loneliness is
about the way people experience relationships subjectively, not the number of
relationships they have, expert say. That
isn’t to say that the number of relationships, or what’s known in the
scientific literature as “social supports,” isn’t important. In fact, a large
body of research has demonstrated that social supports are critical to older
adults’ health and well-being, as well as to their longevity. Instead, both
social supports and loneliness are important, each separately, each in its own
way, even as these components of older people’s lives interact, Dr.
Perissinotto said. Barbara
Dane, an 85-year-old jazz and blues singer who lives in Oakland, Calif., has
seen this play out in her relationship circles. “As
you get older, you see the world writing you off,” she said, adding, “So you tend to become
passive and think, ‘I don’t want to bother anybody.’ You lose contact with your
own kind, your tribe. And before you know it, you’re feeling bad.” “It’s
kind of life a
self-fulfilling prophecy. Your eyes start to fasten
on the sunset, and you start walking toward it.” @ write something off: An
unanswered question is what explains the physical impact of loneliness on older
adults. Andrew Steptoe, director of the Institute of Epidemiology and Health Care at University
College, London, has been studying this subject. “There is growing evidence that
both loneliness and social isolation are related to biological processes that
may increase health risk, including changes in immune and inflammatory
processes and disruption of the stress-related hormones,” he wrote in an
e-mail. “Practical
aspects of human contact may also be important,” Mr. Steptoe continued.
“Someone who lives alone may not have anyone around to call for help if they
suddenly experience acute
symptoms, while a lonely older person may not have others
about them to remind or encourage them to take their medications or follow the
doctor’s advice.” @Epidemiology: A
small study published last year in Psychology and Aging offers another clue. In
that report, Anthony Ong, associate professor of human development at Cornell
University, showed that the blood pressure of older people rises in reaction to
some kinds of stress and that loneliness accentuates this response. “Loneliness
may be something that is particularly salient in later life, and we should
design interventions that help screen for it,” Mr. Ong said. @accentuate: Short
of that, reaching out more consistently to elderly friends, neighbors or
relatives may help, Dr. Perissinotto said. Summary: Loneliness causes health problem according to a
recent study. The researchers were trying to quantify loneliness by asking a
lot of old people how often they felt lonely. The number of older people who
feel lonely has not changed much from 2002 to 2008. According to this research, 13 percent of them were
often lonely, while 30 percent of them were sometimes. The percentage of
declining in their abilities is two times higher in seniors who felt lonely
than in those free of loneliness. Besides, lonely elderly people show the
tendency to die earlier than those free of loneliness. The heart of what
loneliness is and is not doesn’t depend on being alone or a paucity of social
contacts. Although social supports are important, social supports and
loneliness should be considered separately, the researcher said. Older people felt the world didn’t need them anymore
and this resulted in Pygmalion effect to walk toward death. Andrew Steptoe said there is growing evidence of
relationship between loneliness and health risk. When we live alone, we are
likely to be left out and nobody tries to remind or encourage us to take our
medications or follow the doctor’s advice. On the other hand, according to a study in
Psychology and Aging, the blood pressure of elderly people gives rise to
reaction to some kinds of stress and that loneliness accentuates this response.
=>
Loneliness causes health problem according to a recent study.
=> The researchers were trying to quantify
loneliness by asking a lot of old people how often they felt lonely.
if you say that you have yet to do something, you mean that you have never
done it, especially when this is surprising or bad.
to try to find some information or the meaning of something when this is
idden or not clear.
to calculate how much of it there is.
=>
The number of older people who feel lonely has not changed much from 2002 to
2008 and 13 percent of them were often lonely, while 30 percent of them were
sometimes.
=>
The percentage of declining in their abilities is two times higher in seniors
who felt lonely than in those free of loneliness.
=>
Lonely elderly people show the tendency to die earlier than those free of
loneliness.
=>
The heart of what loneliness is and is not doesn’t depend on being alone or a
paucity of social contacts.
=>
Social supports is important but social supports and loneliness should be
considered separately.
=>
Older people felt the world didn’t need them anymore and this resulted in
Pygmalion effect to walk toward death.
to recognize that
something is a failure, has no value, etc; to cancel a debt.
=>
Andrew Steptoe said there is growing evidence of relationship between
loneliness and health risk. When we live alone, we are likely to be left out
and nobody tries to remind or encourage us to take our medications or follow
the doctor’s advice.
the branch of medical science concerned with the occurrence, transmission,
and control of epidemic disease.
=>
On the other hand, according to a study in Psychology and Aging, the blood
pressure of elderly people gives rise to reaction to some kinds of stress and
that loneliness accentuates this response.
to emphasize it or make
it more noticeable.