Strategies of socially isolated older adults: Mechanisms of emergence and persistence.

2020 
Abstract Social isolation relates to a lack of social contacts and interactions with family members, friends or the wider community, and results in diminished health and well-being. And yet many interventions aimed at enhanced social participation are not effective because they do not match the needs of the socially isolated older adults themselves. Little is known about the experiences of socially isolated older adults and their need for help and support. In this paper, we use concepts from Giddens' structuration theory to understand the strategies they use to deal with social isolation in everyday life. We report on findings from in-depth interviews with 25 community-dwelling socially isolated older adults (aged 63–86). Most of them were interviewed two or three times with in-between periods of one to three years. The study shows that they see few possibilities for changing their situation. They consider their social skills as inadequate and choose a mode of behavior that they habitually follow and which implies a certain degree of safety. At the same time, these strategies further lower their chances of social integration and intensify their isolation. These long-term patterns of socialization make social isolation a persistent problem that in many cases takes on a structural character. This mechanism makes social isolation difficult to break through. Most socially isolated older adults have no desire to tackle their isolation but hope to solve their problems by themselves for as long as possible. Practical help may contribute to their self-reliance.
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