• Loneliness raises the likelihood of future unemployment: Study

    Lifestyle
    Loneliness raises the likelihood of future unemployment: Study

    "Our findings suggest that there might be further, wider ramifications that could harm people and the economy. We must investigate this further because it may lay the groundwork for employers or policymakers to address loneliness in order to keep more individuals in their jobs. " color:#252525">

    color:#252525">Digital Desk: Recent studies suggest that being lonely may
    increase the likelihood of being unemployed in the future. Later job loss is
    substantially more likely for those who claim to "frequently feel
    lonely." Researchers from the University of Exeter headed the team that
    published the study's findings in the journal "BMC Public Health."



    color:#252525">Although previous studies have shown that unemployment can lead
    to loneliness, this new study is the first to specifically investigate whether
    the contrary is also true among people of working age.



    color:#252525">Additionally, they discovered that those who were jobless were
    more likely to experience loneliness in the future, which was in line with past
    studies.



    color:#252525">Lead researcher Nia Morrish from the University of Exeter said:
    "Due to the persistent and possibly harmful effects of both loneliness and
    unemployment on health and the economy, prevention of both conditions is
    crucial. Work may help people feel less lonely, and unemployment may help
    people feel less lonely, both of which may have a positive effect on other
    facets of life, such as health and quality of life."



    color:#252525">In order to promote health and wellness, it is important to pay
    special attention to loneliness and provide employers and the government with
    additional support. "Since more people are working from home and may be
    feeling more isolated due to concerns about COVID, we believe this problem may
    be much more urgent now than it was before the pandemic."



    color:#252525">Pre-pandemic data from more than 15,000 participants in the
    Understanding Society Household Longitudinal Study was analysed for this study.
    After adjusting for criteria like age, gender, ethnicity, education, marital
    status, household composition, the number of own children in the home, and
    geography, the team examined participant answers from 2017 to 2019 and again
    from 2018 to 2020. "Loneliness is a very important societal problem, which
    is generally considered in terms of its impact on mental health and wellness
    solely," stated senior author Professor Antonieta Medina-Lara.



    color:#252525">"Our findings suggest that there might be further, wider
    ramifications that could harm people and the economy. We must investigate this
    further because it may lay the groundwork for employers or policymakers to
    address loneliness in order to keep more individuals in their jobs. "



    color:#252525"> 



    "Ours
    is the first study to identify that lonely person of any working age are at
    greater risk of becoming unemployed," says Dr. Ruben Mujica-Mota,
    co-author of the study and Associate Professor of Health Economics at the
    University of Leeds School of Medicine. Previous studies have demonstrated that
    loneliness can result from unemployment.



    "Our
    study shows that these two issues might interact and result in a negative
    feedback loop. It is important to comprehend the broader societal repercussions
    of loneliness in the working-age population."