College of Public Health, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, USA.
Independent Research Consultant, Ardmore, PA, USA.
Res Aging. 2022 May-Jun;44(5-6):369-381. doi: 10.1177/01640275211026649. Epub 2021 Aug 3.
Building on theory suggesting that loneliness is distinct from living arrangements, social isolation, and perceived social support, we examined change in loneliness for older people at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Analyzing 14-years of data with multilevel mixed-effects models, we found higher levels of loneliness among people living alone, people more socially isolated, and people with less perceived support. Gender affected changes in loneliness, controlling for social isolation, perceived support, living arrangements, age, education, income, health, and marital status. Women, whether living alone or with others, experienced increases in loneliness; women living alone reported the greatest increase in loneliness. Men living alone reported high levels of loneliness prior to the pandemic, but only a slight increase over time. These analyses, which demonstrate that loneliness changed at the onset of the pandemic as a function of gender and living arrangement identify older people most likely to benefit from intervention.
基于孤独与居住安排、社会隔离和感知社会支持不同的理论,我们研究了 COVID-19 大流行开始时老年人孤独感的变化。通过多层次混合效应模型分析 14 年的数据,我们发现独居者、社交隔离程度更高者和感知支持较少者的孤独感水平更高。控制社会隔离、感知支持、居住安排、年龄、教育、收入、健康和婚姻状况后,性别会影响孤独感的变化。独居或与他人居住的女性孤独感都有所增加;独居女性报告的孤独感增加最大。独居男性在大流行前就报告了较高水平的孤独感,但随着时间的推移只有轻微增加。这些分析表明,孤独感在大流行开始时会因性别和居住安排而发生变化,这可以确定最需要干预的老年人。