Abstract :
Loneliness is often associated with old age, but many studies have shown that
the relationship is not straightforward. This paper seeks a better understanding
of the impact of social isolation on feelings of loneliness among older people, by
building on the theoretical and actual distinction between social and emotional
loneliness. Social loneliness refers to a lack of feelings of social integration ;
emotional loneliness emerges in the absence of an attachment figure. This paper
focuses on social loneliness and has two aims, first to disentangle the direct and
intermediate effects of both the number and the quality of social relationships on
social loneliness in old age, and second to detect the groups at risk of social
loneliness by identifying which personal features correspond with which relational
deficits and therefore indirectly increase the risk on social loneliness. Data
are analysed for a sample of 1,414 respondents aged 55 or more years drawn from
the Panel Study of Belgian Households conducted in 2000. The results confirm
that improved understanding is gained by decomposing the interrelation between
age and other background features, on the one hand, and the social relational
features, on the other, as indirect and direct predictors of social loneliness.
Generally, this approach promotes a correct identification of the groups at risk of
social loneliness in old age.
Keywords :
social loneliness , social relations , risk groups , LEEN HEYLEN , ageing