| Literature DB >> 30219034 |
Hannah M O'Rourke1, Laura Collins2, Souraya Sidani2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Older adults are at risk for loneliness, and interventions to promote social connectedness are needed to directly address this problem. The nature of interventions aimed to affect the distinct, subjective concepts of loneliness/social connectedness has not been clearly described. The purpose of this review was to map the literature on interventions and strategies to affect loneliness/social connectedness for older adults.Entities:
Keywords: Intervention; Loneliness; Older adult; Scoping review; Social connectedness
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30219034 PMCID: PMC6139173 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-018-0897-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Fig. 1Search results. Results of the search and screening process
Key characteristics of included studies (N = 44)
| Characteristic | % (N) |
|---|---|
| Country | |
| United States | 38.6% (17) |
| The Netherlands / Nordic countries | 22.7% (10) |
| Australia/New Zealand | 13.6% (6) |
| the United Kingdom | 9.1% (4) |
| Asian countries | 6.8% (3) |
| Canada | 6.8% (3) |
| Eastern Europe | 2.3% (1) |
| Culture | |
| Not reported | 54.5% (24) |
| More than 60% white or Caucasian participants | 40.9% (18) |
| More than 50% non-white participants | 4.5% (2) |
| Setting | |
| Community | 54.5% (24) |
| Residential care | 29.5% (13) |
| Mixed community/residential care | 13.6% (6) |
| Not reported | 2.3% (1) |
| Cognitive Impairment | |
| Cognitively intact | 31.8% (14) |
| Not reported | 31.8% (14) |
| Included some people with mild impairment | 29.5% (13) |
| Majority cognitively impaired to a mild, moderate or severe degree | 6.8% (3) |
| Gender | |
| 50% or more of participants were women | 86.4% (38) |
| Not reported | 9.1% (4) |
| 50% or more of participants were men | 4.5% (2) |
Intervention descriptions by type
| Intervention Type | Components & Activities | Mode of Delivery | Doses Described |
|---|---|---|---|
| Personal Contact [ | 1. Personal contact: Scheduled contact with someone from one’s social network (e.g. a family member or friend) or a volunteer who may be similar to the recipient on some characteristics (e.g. age, gender, interests, culture). Discussions are unscripted and informal in nature. Personal contacts may be specifically trained to offer emotional support, and may or may not be permitted to provide instrumental support (e.g., transportation, shopping, minor housekeeping and repairs, letter writing/correspondence, or meal preparation). | • One-to-one | • Usually weekly |
| Activity & Discussion Groups [ | 1. Group Activity Participation: joining a new group, and engaging in an activity of interest (e.g. song-writing, gardening projects, painting, pottery, dance, music, poetry, drama, jewelry making, storytelling, therapeutic writing, exercise, etc.) | • Group of 5 to 9 people | • Sessions once or twice per week |
| Animal Contact [ | 1. Animal Contact: contact with an animal, usually a cat or dogs; animal simulations have also been used (e.g. a robotic seal). Activity with the animal is self-guided and may include talking to, holding, petting, playing with, grooming, or walking the animal on a leash. A person’s preference for animal type (e.g. cat or dog) as well as size (e.g. small or large) may be assessed in order to individualize the treatment. Sometimes, the person is assigned to one animal to have contact with for all sessions. | • Face-to-face | • 1 to 3 times per week |
| Skills Course [ | 1. Skills instruction: Instruction given to older adults to improve their ability to have contact with others and/or to enhance their existing friendships, or to make new friends. The activities differ depending on the type of skills that are taught. Skills taught have included: mindfulness-based stress reduction [ | • Face-to-face | • Usually weekly |
| Varied/Non-Specific [ | 1. Service delivery or social assistance: These are usually multi-component interventions, but the different components are not clearly conceptualized or described, and are described broadly as improving service delivery within a community. Types of services offered in a single program to a community may be related to any combination of: increased fitness or arts programs, or other social/leisure activities; improved transportation; access to information or resources; and/or consultation with medical, nursing, counseling, financial or housing experts. | Unclear as to who delivered different services and/or how these were delivered | • Programs lasted for 6 months to 2 years |
| Model of Care [ | 1. Increase spontaneous, resident-driven and purposeful interaction with plants, animals and children: the Eden philosophy is about creating a ‘human habitat’ by providing opportunity for residents to interact as desired with plants, animals and children in their daily life in order to address issues related to loneliness, boredom and helplessness experienced by residents of long-term care facilities. Both interventions described staff training to understand the philosophy. | Unclear who was trained, and what implementation of this philosophy looked like in practice. | Unclear what facilities actually did to implement the philosophy |
| Reminiscence [ | 1. Reminiscence: A topic or theme is provided for the session (e.g. school days, holiday traditions, first house and anniversaries, family histories and life stories, etc.) and participants share with the group their recollections. | • Face-to-face in a comfortable setting | • 1 to 2 times per week |
| Support Group [ | 1. Peer support group: Participants attend meetings where they select areas of discussion related to their needs and challenges that they face. Peer and professionals provide information resources and/or emotional support related to identified challenges. | • Face-to-face | • Weekly |
| Public Broadcast [ | 1. Familiar music: Listening to music (primarily), serials and other segments of radio programs that were popular in the 1920–1950s. | • to individuals | • Daily |
Theoretical underpinnings: proportion of studies targeting each modifiablea factor and indicator, by type of intervention based on proposed mechanisms of action
| Intervention Type | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Personal Contact [ | Activity Group [ | Animal Contact [ | Skills Course [ | Varied/Non-Specific [ | Model of Care [ | Reminiscence [ | Support Group [ | Public Broadcast [ | |
| Proportion of studies targeting each factor/indicator | |||||||||
| Caring | 3/8 | 3/7 | 4/6 | 3/6 | 2/2 | 1/2 | 1/1 | ||
| Belonging | 1/8 | 1/7 | |||||||
| Social Network | 8/8 | 4/7 | 4/6 | 4/6 | 5/5 | 2/2 | 1/2 | ||
| Social Support | 6/8 | 1/7 | 2/6 | 1/6 | 2/5 | 2/2 | |||
| Personal development | 1/7 | 4/6 | 2/5 | 1/2 | 1/2 | ||||
| Technology use | 2/8 | 2/6 | 1/1 | ||||||
| Busy/Purposeful | 1/6 | 1/6 | 1/1 | ||||||
| Mental/Emotional | 1/6 | 1/2 | |||||||
| Social participation | 6/7 | 1/5 | |||||||
aThere are additional influencing factors that are non-modifiable or difficult to modify. These include marital status, age, living arrangement, cognitive ability, sex or gender, level of formal education, income, religious affiliation, family composition, ethnicity, and death of a spouse. All modifiable factors were identified in a previous literature review [1], except for keeping busy/purposeful activity and personal development, which were identified in the current review from the synthesis of strategies identified in qualitative studies. Modifiable factors of service use, self-reported health and group memberships were not targeted by any of the studies