Should Canada develop a strategy to combat the growing problem of loneliness?
Loneliness
More from this episode:
We've all felt it.
That deep sadness... that feeling that one has no friends... no company.
Yet, people rarely talk about being lonely. Loneliness isn't necessarily solitude. It's a longing... we dare not speak of.
Statistics Canada reports that 1.4 million seniors say they're lonely. But it's not only the elderly. Young people too—teens and twenty-somethings—are experiencing epidemic levels of loneliness.
Loneliness isn't only making us sad. It's fast becoming a public health crisis in the Western world.
Lonely people are more likely to get sick. Chronic loneliness is as harmful to your health as smoking 15 cigarettes a day. Loneliness is even more damaging to your body than obesity and diabetes and has been linked to high blood pressure, dementia and premature death.
What do you think is at the root of loneliness? In some, it's linked to anxiety and depression. But more Canadians than ever live alone and a quarter of them say they're lonely. Could we do a better job of designing public spaces? Is social media making us more connected—or less?
On Jan. 17, Britain named a Minister of Loneliness to tackle the problem. In Canada, Manitoba has a minister responsible for ensuring that seniors stay engaged socially, but there's currently no national strategy to help those who feel lonely. Do you think loneliness is a problem governments can resolve? How do we deal with the fact that people don't connect with their elderly relatives?
Our question: "Should Canada develop a strategy to combat the growing problem of loneliness?"
Guests
Brian Goldman, ER physician and the host of CBC Radio One's White Coat Black Art.
Brian Primack, director of the Center for Research on Media, Technology and Health at the University of Pittsburgh (School of Medicine), author of a study on social media and young adults.
Charles Montgomery, author of Happy City: Transforming Our Lives Through Urban Design. (2013)
Susan Pinker, Montreal clinical psychologist who discussed loneliness in her 2014 book, The Village Effect: Why Face-to-Face Contact Matters.
What we're reading
CBC.ca
- The National: Does Canada need a loneliness strategy?
- Nearly 70% of university students battle loneliness during school year, survey says
- Lonely in Vancouver? So are 30 per cent of young people
- Loneliness equals a pack a day
- Tapestry: Living in the age of loneliness
- Metro Morning audio: The Loneliness Project
- The Sunday Edition: The 'Men's Shed' movement helps older men stave off loneliness
- Manitoba program fights loneliness by connecting seniors through conference calls
National Post
- Loneliness could kill you
- Lonely people are more likely to get sick and researchers want to know why
- Loneliness often an invisible symptom of chronic disease
- Scientists hope to inject robo-cat with AI to help seniors
Globe and Mail
Toronto Star
Guardian
Independent