McGorry et al

Friendship on the Frontline

Author: Sheridan Voysey Introduction When the eighty-year-long Harvard Study of Adult Development concluded, researchers in

The Role of Social Prescribing in Tackling Loneliness in young people

2024 is set to be the loneliest year on record for people in the UK, and the situation may be similar in Australia. UK government figures predict nearly one in seven will be living alone by 2039. By that same time, a quarter of the population will be 65+, creating its own set of challenges. The wider breakdown in community life ties many of these problems together: older people are increasingly reliant on government rather than family and local community support to help them in later life. The number of people living alone is closely linked to the rise in loneliness, as people lack everyday companionship found in the home, which also contributes to the West’s housing shortage, particularly in the UK and Australia. Japan suffers from an epidemic of isolation so acute it carries
a name: kodokushi, or ‘lonely deaths’, where a corpse might go undiscovered for months in an unvisited apartment, before the smell finally alerts someone

The Silent Epidemic: Unravelling the Complexities of Loneliness Among Young Australians

In the bustling cities and quiet towns across Australia, a silent epidemic is taking hold among the nation’s youth. While the majority of young adults navigate their daily lives with a sense of connection and belonging, an increasing number are grappling with a pervasive sense of loneliness. This phenomenon, once primarily associated with the elderly, has now emerged as a significant concern for those in the prime of their lives. In an Australian study of nearly 1500 adolescents and young adults, more than one in three (37%) young adults aged 18–25 indicated a problematic level of loneliness.