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Prevalence of loneliness among older adults in Germany

[journal article]

Wurm, Susanne
Ehrlich, Ulrike
Meyer-Wyk, Frauke
Spuling, Svenja M.

Abstract

Loneliness refers to the subjective perception of a mismatch between a person’s social needs and their actual personal relationships. In this paper, the prevalence of loneliness in the older population was examined based on current data. Methods: The German Ageing Survey is an ongoing, population-r... view more

Loneliness refers to the subjective perception of a mismatch between a person’s social needs and their actual personal relationships. In this paper, the prevalence of loneliness in the older population was examined based on current data. Methods: The German Ageing Survey is an ongoing, population-representative study. A total of 4,261 people 50 years of age and older were surveyed in 2020/2021 with regard to their experience of loneliness. Results: Overall, 8.3 % of the population 50 years of age and older feel lonely. The findings showed no differences between different age groups over 50 years of age, nor are there gender or educational differences. Conclusions: There was no evidence that older individuals living in private households experience loneliness more commonly than middle-aged individuals. Data from nursing home residents indicate that there may be a higher risk of loneliness... view less

Keywords
elderly; adult; solitude; social isolation; perception; gender-specific factors; demographic factors; socioeconomic factors; Federal Republic of Germany

Classification
Gerontology

Free Keywords
DEAS 2020/21; Subjektive Gesundheit; Sozialbeziehung

Document language
English

Publication Year
2023

Page/Pages
p. 49-53

Journal
Journal of Health Monitoring, 8 (2023) 3

DOI
https://doi.org/10.25646/11664

ISSN
2511-2708

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.