Around 1.4 million older people in the UK are chronically lonely. Loneliness is not just painful — it is a serious health risk. But it is also addressable. This guide explains what helps.
Loneliness increases with age for a cluster of interconnected reasons:
Loneliness and social isolation are associated with significant health risks:
Loneliness is also strongly associated with depression, accelerated cognitive decline, and overall earlier mortality.
There is no single solution to loneliness. What works depends on the person. But these interventions have the strongest evidence:
Consistency matters more than frequency. A weekly visit from the same person — who knows the person and has a genuine relationship with them — does more than irregular visits from different people. This is one of the reasons home care companionship visits are effective: the same carer at the same time each week builds genuine connection.
Passively watching television does not address loneliness. Activities that engage the mind and involve social interaction — clubs, classes, volunteering — are more effective. What was the person passionate about earlier in life? What do they still enjoy? Starting there is more likely to succeed than imposing an activity.
For people with very limited mobility, telephone befriending schemes provide regular friendly calls from trained volunteers:
A companion carer from Ekvarta is not a formal care intervention — it's a friendly visit. The same person at the same time each week, to chat, have a cup of tea, play cards, go for a walk, or watch a favourite programme together. Over time, a genuine relationship forms.
For many older adults, their Ekvarta carer becomes one of the most important relationships in their life. This is not by accident — it is by design.
If you're worried about a parent or older relative who seems isolated:
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