What kind of a problem is loneliness? Representations of connectedness and participation from a study of telepresence technologies in the UK
Hughes, Gemma; Moore, Lucy; Hennessy, Megan; Sandset, Tony Joakim Ananiassen; Jentoft, Elian Eve; Haldar, Marit
Peer reviewed, Journal article
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Date
2024Metadata
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Original version
10.3389/fdgth.2024.1304085Abstract
Loneliness is represented in UK policy as a public health problem with
consequences in terms of individual suffering, population burden and service
use. However, loneliness is historically and culturally produced; manifestations
of loneliness and social isolation also require social and cultural analysis. We
explored meanings of loneliness and social isolation in the UK 2020–2022
and considered what the solutions of telepresence technologies reveal about
the problems they are used to address. Through qualitative methods we
traced the introduction and use of two telepresence technologies and
representations of these, and other technologies, in policy and UK media. Our
dataset comprises interviews, fieldnotes, policy documents, grey literature and
newspaper articles. We found loneliness was represented as a problem of
individual human connection and of collective participation in social life, with
technology understood as having the potential to enhance and inhibit
connections and participation. Technologically-mediated connections were
frequently perceived as inferior to in-person contact, particularly in light of the
enforced social isolation of the COVID-19 pandemic. We argue that
addressing loneliness requires attending to other, related, health and social
problems and introducing technological solutions requires integration into the
complex social and organisational dynamics that shape technology adoption.
We conclude that loneliness is primarily understood as a painful lack of
co-presence, no longer regarded as simply a subjective experience, but as a
social and policy problem demanding resolution.