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Preventing Social Isolation in Older People

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Preventing Social Isolation in Older People. / Cotterell, Natalie; Buffel, Tine; Phillipson, Chris.
In: Maturitas, Vol. 113, 31.07.2018, p. 80-84.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Cotterell, N, Buffel, T & Phillipson, C 2018, 'Preventing Social Isolation in Older People', Maturitas, vol. 113, pp. 80-84. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.maturitas.2018.04.014

APA

Vancouver

Cotterell N, Buffel T, Phillipson C. Preventing Social Isolation in Older People. Maturitas. 2018 Jul 31;113:80-84. Epub 2018 May 3. doi: 10.1016/j.maturitas.2018.04.014

Author

Cotterell, Natalie ; Buffel, Tine ; Phillipson, Chris. / Preventing Social Isolation in Older People. In: Maturitas. 2018 ; Vol. 113. pp. 80-84.

Bibtex

@article{6fa5eee4907d4c9f859f5f5ba066aef5,
title = "Preventing Social Isolation in Older People",
abstract = "The extent of social isolation amongst older people has emerged as a major concern for health and social policy. Although the social and health outcomes of social isolation are well documented, evidence regarding the prevention of isolation in later life remains scarce. This article addresses this by presenting the findings from a literature review focusing on the identification, assessment, prevention, and intervention strategies relevant to social isolation in older age. The paper first addresses the issues of identification and assessment, using an ecological framework to identify the risk factors for social isolation at four levels: individual, relationship, community, and societal. It then reviews different types of interventions to reduce or prevent social isolation in later life, including one-to-one, group, service provision, technology-based, neighbourhood, and structural interventions. The paper discusses both the opportunities and the constraints associated with these different approaches. The discussion highlights future directions for research, emphasising the need for a cultural change from {\textquoteleft}cure{\textquoteright} to {\textquoteleft}prevention{\textquoteright} of social isolation across the life-course, and the importance of acknowledging greater diversity within the ageing population.",
author = "Natalie Cotterell and Tine Buffel and Chris Phillipson",
year = "2018",
month = jul,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1016/j.maturitas.2018.04.014",
language = "English",
volume = "113",
pages = "80--84",
journal = "Maturitas",
issn = "0378-5122",
publisher = "Elsevier Ireland Ltd",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Preventing Social Isolation in Older People

AU - Cotterell, Natalie

AU - Buffel, Tine

AU - Phillipson, Chris

PY - 2018/7/31

Y1 - 2018/7/31

N2 - The extent of social isolation amongst older people has emerged as a major concern for health and social policy. Although the social and health outcomes of social isolation are well documented, evidence regarding the prevention of isolation in later life remains scarce. This article addresses this by presenting the findings from a literature review focusing on the identification, assessment, prevention, and intervention strategies relevant to social isolation in older age. The paper first addresses the issues of identification and assessment, using an ecological framework to identify the risk factors for social isolation at four levels: individual, relationship, community, and societal. It then reviews different types of interventions to reduce or prevent social isolation in later life, including one-to-one, group, service provision, technology-based, neighbourhood, and structural interventions. The paper discusses both the opportunities and the constraints associated with these different approaches. The discussion highlights future directions for research, emphasising the need for a cultural change from ‘cure’ to ‘prevention’ of social isolation across the life-course, and the importance of acknowledging greater diversity within the ageing population.

AB - The extent of social isolation amongst older people has emerged as a major concern for health and social policy. Although the social and health outcomes of social isolation are well documented, evidence regarding the prevention of isolation in later life remains scarce. This article addresses this by presenting the findings from a literature review focusing on the identification, assessment, prevention, and intervention strategies relevant to social isolation in older age. The paper first addresses the issues of identification and assessment, using an ecological framework to identify the risk factors for social isolation at four levels: individual, relationship, community, and societal. It then reviews different types of interventions to reduce or prevent social isolation in later life, including one-to-one, group, service provision, technology-based, neighbourhood, and structural interventions. The paper discusses both the opportunities and the constraints associated with these different approaches. The discussion highlights future directions for research, emphasising the need for a cultural change from ‘cure’ to ‘prevention’ of social isolation across the life-course, and the importance of acknowledging greater diversity within the ageing population.

U2 - 10.1016/j.maturitas.2018.04.014

DO - 10.1016/j.maturitas.2018.04.014

M3 - Journal article

VL - 113

SP - 80

EP - 84

JO - Maturitas

JF - Maturitas

SN - 0378-5122

ER -