Curated & Guest Posts Archives - The Foundation for Art & Healing https://www.artandhealing.org/category/unlonely-project/guest-posts/ The UnLonely Project is our Signature Initiative Wed, 19 Mar 2025 01:14:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://www.artandhealing.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/cropped-fah-favicon-1-32x32.png Curated & Guest Posts Archives - The Foundation for Art & Healing https://www.artandhealing.org/category/unlonely-project/guest-posts/ 32 32 The Powerful Tool of Stories https://www.artandhealing.org/powerful-tool-stories/ Thu, 08 Sep 2022 14:53:37 +0000 https://www.artandhealing.org/?p=249500 by Reji Mathew, Ph.D., LCSW, REAT

As an expressive arts educator and advocate, a central ethos of my teaching approach is to bring ideas to life through multi-media arts expression, referred to as intermodal processing, using the arts as a tool to process themes.

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The Powerful Tool of Stories

by Reji Mathew, PHD, LCSW, REAT
Arts Reporter, Arts and Recovery Team, Disastershock.com
Arts Accessibility Advocate, Anti-Racist Art Educator

August 23rd, 2022

As an expressive arts educator and advocate, a central ethos of my teaching approach is to bring ideas to life through multi-media arts expression, referred to as intermodal processing, using the arts as a tool to process themes. This method invites students to connect to ideas intellectually and kinesthetically, to let the ideas begin to live inside themselves, which can stimulate new interpretations of the material.

When I stumbled upon the Project UnLonely Film Festival, I discovered a cross- cultural, intergenerational, intersectional collection of short films exploring themes of loneliness across the lifespan; I laughed, I cried, I reflected; each film offered an impactful lens into human struggles and triumphs.

In my graduate-level teaching at NYU, I have integrated Project UnLonely films into my lessons. To explore themes of aging, Burning Van, the story of nomadic seniors, and Dial a Ride were compelling films on the struggles of aging persons finding safety, shelter, and community. I also showed The Paint Wizzard, a poignant, intimate story of an aging trans female painter finding meaningful work and place in the world.

In my classes on Trauma & Recovery, Sticks and Stones, a film about toxic masculinity, left a powerful impression on students, especially seeing visually through art images how hurtful images get internalized.

The harms and benefits of the digital world is an ongoing mental health theme in my classes; I loved contrasting I Forgot my Phone, a funny, compelling look at our obsessions with phones and what we miss out on in the present moment, with Ms. Diva Trucker, is a beautiful film on how social media builds community for so many isolated people.

Cinema Therapy, a branch of the expressive arts, posits that stories allow us to feel, reflect, and draw inferences about our lives with safety & aesthetic distance. For therapeutic aims, I have also recommended Project UnLonely films to psychotherapists to use as a tool for processing in counseling in my community public health lectures.

Project UnLonely is not only a case study on loneliness across the lifespan but also a model of the future of inclusive storytelling. Screenplay Writer Robert Rippberger says that if you have seen 1000 movies, you have lived 1000 lives. The films of Project UnLonely tell stories about aging, gender identity, immigration, race, sexual health rights, emerging adulthood, and more; they are stories told with bravery, transparency, and life affirmation.

The mission of Project UnLonely is a gift; they understand deeply that the true path to easing our loneliness is through social empathy when we find our shared humanity in the stories of each other.

Reji Mathew, Ph.D., LCSW, REAT is an Expressive Arts Educator & Advocate, Integrative CBT/DBT Psychotherapist, and Intermodal Artist living in New York, N.Y.

Website / Twitter / Instagram

Pronouns: She, Her, Hers

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Next Avenue’s 2020 Influencers in Aging https://www.artandhealing.org/next-avenues-2020-influencers-in-aging/ Tue, 02 Feb 2021 21:44:14 +0000 https://www.artandhealing.org/?p=242234&preview=true&preview_id=242234 Dr. Jeremy Nobel's life work is dedicated to healing – as a physician and faculty member of the Harvard Medical School. He is also dedicated to the healing of soul and spirit, as the Founder and President of the Foundation for Art & Healing, which explores the connection between the two elements of healing and art.

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Next Avenue’s 2020 Influencers in Aging

Every year, Next Avenue awards advocates, researchers, thought leaders, innovators, writers and experts who continue to push beyond traditional boundaries and change our understanding of what it means to grow older. We’re honored that in 2020, our Founder and President – Jeremy Nobel, MD, MPH – was recognized as an Influencer in Aging alongside aging champions like Former Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy, AARP’s Jean Accius, and our very own UnLonely Film Festival stars: Grandpa Chan and Grandma Marina.

Below, read a brief except of the article that was written by Julie Pfitzinger for nextavenue.org.

Dr. Jeremy Nobel’s life work is dedicated to healing – as a physician and faculty member of the Harvard Medical School, in the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, the list of achievements relative to his medical career is long.

He is also dedicated to the healing of soul and spirit, as the Founder and President of the Foundation for Art & Healing (FAH), a nonprofit based in Boston, where Nobel, 66, lives. It explores the connection between the two elements of healing and art, and raises awareness about points of connectivity. Loneliness and isolation, and the impact not only on individuals, but on society in general, are also areas of focus.

Once the pandemic hit in force last spring, FAH, in partnership with AARP and other organizations, launched “Stuck at Home (together)” featuring a variety of creative and inspiring options (music, stories and other activities) with the goal of offering emotional solace…

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Harvard Magazine January 2021 Feature: The Loneliness Pandemic https://www.artandhealing.org/harvard-magazine-january-2021-the-loneliness-pandemic/ Tue, 02 Feb 2021 19:30:02 +0000 https://www.artandhealing.org/?p=242218&preview=true&preview_id=242218 Loneliness is not just a quality of life issue but impacts an individual’s productivity and performance in the workplace, panelists noted during an American Health Policy Institute webinar on the impact of COVID-19 on loneliness and employee wellness.

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Harvard Magazine January 2021 Feature: The Loneliness Pandemic

Harvard Magazine’s January 2021 cover story, “The Loneliness Pandemic,” covered the psychology and social costs of isolation in everyday life. The Founder & President of the Foundation for Art & Healing – Jeremy Nobel, MD, MPH – contributed his expertise having created the UnLonely Project, which increases public awareness of loneliness and lessens its burden for those struggling to cope. The Foundation and its UnLonely Project initiative provide art-focused activities and resources to help people heal emotionally and improve community well-being.

Read a brief except of the article, which was written by Jacob Sweet and harvardmagazine.com, directly below. 

BRADLEY RIEW ’18 had a calendar reliably packed from 9 A.M. to midnight. To him, that didn’t seem so bad. “You know,” he says, “you have nine hours to sleep.”

On top of his schoolwork and various extracurriculars, he spent about 20 hours a week volunteering at local homeless shelters. He acknowledges now how well he fit the “overworked Harvard student” stereotype, but during sophomore year the commitments didn’t strike him as unusual. “I was just doing what everyone else was doing,” he says. “I was just absorbed in that culture of go, go, go, go, go.”

But the packed days strung together, the work piled on, and Riew felt more and more drained. Classwork encroached later into the night, and he went to bed with a level of exhaustion that rest couldn’t fix. “I didn’t really have time to do my schoolwork,” he recalls, “and I didn’t have time to just relax or spend time talking to somebody.”

Riew had no problem connecting with others, but keeping in touch and forming strong friendships was harder. He’d think about reaching out to someone, only to realize that they hadn’t spoken for months and decide the effort wasn’t worth it. Potential friends were now just friendly acquaintances. “And all my relationships were like that,” he says.

His productivity outpaced his social life, until it didn’t. His grades began to slip, and he started feeling depressed. “I got to the point where I didn’t care about anything I was doing,” he admits. “I was doing it because I had been doing it before.” He decided to take a leave of absence after that year, staying home in St. Louis. Only when the noise of undergraduate life began to fade did he finally begin to see the root of his problems: though he was far from alone, he was lonely.

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As Loneliness Presents Itself at Work, What Can Employers Do? https://www.artandhealing.org/as-loneliness-presents-itself-at-work-what-can-employers-do/ Fri, 20 Nov 2020 05:00:30 +0000 https://www.artandhealing.org/?p=242023&preview=true&preview_id=242023 Loneliness is not just a quality of life issue but impacts an individual’s productivity and performance in the workplace, panelists noted during an American Health Policy Institute webinar on the impact of COVID-19 on loneliness and employee wellness.

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As Loneliness Presents Itself at Work, What Can Employers Do?

In November 2020, the Founder & President of the Foundation for Art & Healing – Jeremy Nobel, MD, MPH – led a conversation with American Health Policy Institute about COVID-19’s impact on employee loneliness and isolation to help answer the question, What Can CHROs Do to Improve Employee Well-Being? Panelists included Dr. Stuart Lustig, MD, MPH, National Medical Executive for Behavioral Health, Cigna; James Garvie, SVP HR, Total Rewards and Technology, Southern Company; and Dr. Laurie Hommema, MD, Medical Director, Provider and Associate Well-Being, OhioHealth.

During the webinar, panelists noted that loneliness is not just a quality of life issue but impacts an individual’s productivity and performance in the workplace. The below summary of the webinar was originally created by Margaret Lasso on hrpolicy.orgTo watch the webinar, please view the below video recording.

Significant health risks accompany loneliness: Dr. Jeremy Nobel, MD, MPH, who is on the Harvard Medical School faculty and President, Foundation for Art & Healing, presented ways employers can help employees struggling with loneliness during these times. He referenced an employer case study evaluating Health Risk Assessment questionnaires which found employees that were identified as lonely had roughly twice the number of avoidable admissions and readmissions than employees who were not identified as lonely.

How are employers addressing loneliness so far? Dr. Stuart Lustig, MD, MPH, National Medical Executive for Behavioral Health, Cigna, James Garvie, SVP HR, Total Rewards and Technology, Southern Company, and Dr. Laurie Hommema, MD, Medical Director, Provider and Associate Well-Being, OhioHealth, shared the work they have been doing as employers to improve the health and wellbeing of their employees. The panelists agreed that employers can take steps like ramping up education and awareness programs, promoting engagement and connection among employees, improving access to assistance, and continually monitoring and measuring the mental health of their employees.

Outlook: Creating an environment which lets employees know they have avenues for support is crucial, and there are many ways to approach this. The UnLonely Project, for example, founded by Dr. Nobel, uses the arts as a way to reduce the burden of loneliness and isolation. The American Health Policy Institute continues to engage with The Path Forward and policy makers in advocating for evidence-based behavioral health care reform.

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Campus StoryFest Winner: What’s Up Danger https://www.artandhealing.org/campus-storyfest/ Thu, 05 Nov 2020 23:10:27 +0000 https://www.artandhealing.org/?p=238380&preview=true&preview_id=238380 What’s Up Danger is a film that follows one second of every day during a month in 2016. As we see snippets from Faith’s days, we also hear her voiceover, speaking two years later, about her experience recovering from cancer. We hear her thoughts looking through a more innocent time in her life.

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Campus StoryFest Winner: What’s Up Danger

With many universities moving online, loneliness on college campuses has become its own public health crisis. A spring 2019 survey from the American College Health Association revealed that the majority of college students struggle with their mental health: nearly 66% of college students said they felt very lonely at some point over the past twelve months, 71% felt very sad, and 66% felt overwhelming anxiety. That was before the pandemic, and it’s likely much worse now.

These feelings can have serious consequences that impact students’ health as well as their academic performance. In the same American College Health Association survey, 27% of students reported that feelings of anxiety had caused them to achieve a lower grade on an exam or in a class, while 20% of students said that feelings of depression were the cause of worse academic performance.

To address loneliness on college campuses, the Foundation for Art & Healing expanded its Campus UnLonely initiative by launching Storyfest late in 2019. StoryFest, a short-term creative expression competition, invites undergraduate students to create and share short videos about their experiences. By offering a forum for sharing these short two-minute videos, students are able to reflect on campus life through a specialized art form that communicates their experiences and feelings.

StoryFest’s inaugural launch in 2019 focused on the theme of “Difference and Belonging.” After reviewing submissions, the Foundation for Art & Healing is excited to announce the winning film of the 2019 StoryFest:

Congratulations to Faith Lowhorn on her StoryFest winning film, What’s Up Danger.

What’s Up Danger is a film that follows one second of every day during a month in 2016. As we see snippets from Faith’s days, we also hear her voiceover, speaking two years later, about her experience recovering from cancer. We hear her thoughts looking through a more innocent time in her life.

Faith’s story is poignant and personal. “Most want to control every aspect in life,” Faith said about her film. “When something as unpredictable as cancer takes hold, I want[ed] to show that staying positive will pave a path through any darkness.”

Feeling alone and different while struggling with health concerns is a story to which a lot of college students can relate, especially in light of current circumstances. Many students are facing unforeseen challenges right now, and short films like What’s Up Danger are exactly the kind of creative expression we are proud to elevate to help others decompress their distress.

Faith, a current student at the College for Creative Studies in Detroit, Michigan, has big plans for the future. Her artistic passions have led her to illustration, a field she hopes to go into professionally once she graduates.

Given the urgency of loneliness across college campuses in 2020, the Foundation for Art & Healing is growing its college and university partnerships to implement more Campus UnLonely programming, such as StoryFest, in order to reach the young adults that need it the most. To learn more about our range of programs for campuses, please contact amy@artandhealing.org.

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Partnering with Community Organizations to Address Older Adult Loneliness https://www.artandhealing.org/partnering-with-community-organizations-to-address-older-adult-loneliness/ Fri, 16 Oct 2020 14:03:46 +0000 https://www.artandhealing.org/?p=237869&preview=true&preview_id=237869 Community-based organizations (CBOs) are well-positioned to provide effective programs that reduce loneliness, enhance social connection, and build social cohesion skills and confidence. Unfortunately, CBOs are often constrained by lack of suitable program content, skilled facilitators, and the ability to evaluate program outcomes to demonstrate benefit. This article describes an approach to partnering with CBOs to address loneliness that offers innovative program content, including creative arts expression, mindfulness, and social-emotional learning activities—all available for streaming or download from a digital platform, efficiently and cost-effectively.

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Partnering with Community Organizations to Address Older Adult Loneliness

As seen in Generations from the American Society of Aging 

 
Abstract

Community-based organizations (CBOs) are well-positioned to provide effective programs that reduce loneliness, enhance social connection, and build social cohesion skills and confidence. Unfortunately, CBOs are often constrained by a lack of suitable program content, skilled facilitators, and the ability to evaluate program outcomes to demonstrate benefit. This article describes an approach to partnering with CBOs to address loneliness that offers innovative program content, including creative arts expression, mindfulness, and social-emotional learning activities—all available for streaming or download from a digital platform, efficiently and cost-effectively.

Eileen (not her real name) is an older woman in her late 70s who had been experiencing loneliness and hopelessness since the death of her husband. Living in a Naturally Occurring Retirement Center (NORC) in Harlem, Eileen, with eleven peers from her NORC, participated in the Foundation for Art & Healing’s Creativity Circle®​ pilot in the fall of 2019.

Eileen was unsure what to expect at first, but eventually made friends with a younger woman who sat next to her during the weekly group. Soon, she was participating more in the community around her, and even began forming small groups with other residents to practice painting together.

“Now I’m all involved in arts and crafts here,” Eileen said. “I’ve started a group; I’m joining another group. It’s lifesaving. I have to admit to you, sometimes I feel it’s not worth living, because there’s too many problems and it’s so overwhelming. But when you have some drawing and pleasure and fun, and you’re doing your passion, you can live.”

Loneliness a Complex Personal and Public Health Challenge

Loneliness, a common source of distress and impaired quality of life for older adults, is a complex personal and public health challenge that research (Pettigrew and Roberts, 2007) indicates can be addressed effectively. The significance of that opportunity, to bring older adults more routinely into rewarding and meaningful contact with others, is matched only by its urgency.

At its extreme, loneliness not only limits satisfaction with one’s life, but can cut it short, carrying a 30 percent risk of premature death. According to a 2018 AARP survey (Anderson and Thayer), some 35 percent of U.S. adults ages 45 and older were lonely, and more recent studies (Cigna, 2020) by health insurer Cigna place that number even higher. Loneliness bears an economic toll as well. According to AARP (Flowers et al., 2017), lack of social contacts among Medicare beneficiaries was associated with an estimated $6.7 billion in additional federal spending annually.

‘Now I’m all involved in arts and crafts here.’

To better address loneliness in older adults, the Foundation for Art & Healing (FAH) developed an easy-to-deliver, arts-enabled support group program to raise awareness, build skills, and enhance social connection. The program can be delivered by a wide variety of community organizations. Imagine a dozen older adults, meeting regularly with a facilitator in a comfortable setting to participate in fun, engaging activities that develop authentic relationships and foster a sense of belonging. The challenge is not just to make effective program content available, but to organize its distribution in a fashion that is also scalable and sustainable. This would have been challenging in the best of times, and now with COVID-19, the stakes are even higher. Then again, so are the potential rewards.

Given the context of the global pandemic, the importance of addressing loneliness and social isolation among the nation’s older adults is higher than ever: 72 percent of U.S. adults ages 55 or older report sometimes or often feeling more lonely than usual (Anderson and Thayer, 2018). The health outcomes of the pandemic underscore how social determinants of health are a major factor in health impairment, with social isolation emerging as one of the most significant. Rifts in the social fabric during tough times make the strengthening of social bonds even more vital. As a major social determinant of health that drives up disaster-related mortality outcomes (Klinenberg, 2002), loneliness and social isolation cannot be ignored.

Like politics, many factors that influence health are local and threaded through the communities in which we live. While many community-based organizations (CBOs) have increased their efforts to address the social connection needs of older adults, especially during this pandemic, they often are under-resourced and lack the tools and expertise to confront loneliness effectively and sustainably. Even before the pandemic, recognizing the essential role that CBOs play in supporting and connecting older adults, the FAH through its Aging UnLonely activities, began exploring ways to partner with CBOs to reduce the risk of loneliness among older adults. With advice and guidance from a broad array of experts and innovative organizations, FAH designed, developed, and is now expanding its rollout of tools and enablers that empower CBOs to deliver effective, scalable, and sustainable social connection programs.

The Creativity Circle® Platform: A Scalable Solution for Delivering Effective Programming

Two years ago, with lead support from the AARP Foundation, FAH initiated work on its Creativity Circle® Platform. The goal was to develop a “social utility” that could provide broad access to low-cost and effective group support programs nationwide. The Creativity Circle® Platform uses cloud-based digital technology to enable cost-efficient distribution of scripted curriculum and evaluation guides to support delivering and assessing programs. The Creativity Circle® Platform can be looked at as a cloud-based “vending machine,” accessible through the Internet, which allows program managers and facilitators to gain access to scripts and guides to offer Creativity Circle® activities in a wide variety of settings.

This digital distribution of program content, which also offers automated access to tools and guides for field facilitator training and support, allows CBOs to quickly scale up program implementation. Social connection­­­-­oriented programs can be delivered in traditional settings for older adults such as senior centers and health clinics, as well as in non-traditional venues such as libraries, museums, and places of worship.

The Creativity Circle® program, accessible to CBO facilitators through the digital platform, was developed as a support-group model that incorporates a unique blend of mindfulness, creative arts expression, and social-emotional learning activities. These three well-accepted support modalities combine dynamically to help participants quickly feel welcomed and integrated into the group setting, to invite the sharing of personal experiences and reflections, to improve social skills, and to form deeper connections. The curriculum is organized around an array of creative exercises that use writing, visual art, movement, and music to help participants process their aging experiences and to discuss healthy aging themes such as resiliency, stress management, and friendships. With the added elements of mindfulness and social-emotional learning, the Creativity Circle® program holistically engages participants, offering them an opportunity to decompress stress and anxiety around aging and related life circumstances like bereavement. It all unfolds within a supportive group environment that nurtures the development of the skills and routines that enable relationship building and social connection.

The curriculum is organized around creative exercises to help participants process their aging experiences and to discuss healthy aging themes.

To allow CBOs to get “up and running” quickly, the Creativity Circle® Platform’s technology base is user-friendly and easy to navigate, requiring minimal orientation. A facilitator from a CBO, with even modest support group management experience, can stream or download the materials needed to run a successful program. Those tools include in-depth facilitator training guides in print and video, detailed curriculum, and surveys to evaluate program participant experience. Designed to deliver a full portfolio of relevant program curricula, the digital platform offers a starter-set of successful aging topics, with additional program content to be introduced over time.

Testing the Creativity Circle® Platform: Starting in Three States

In its inaugural year, FAH launched a pilot program in nine CBO sites across the country, three each in Chicago, New York City, and Maine–chosen specifically to gain experience in a mix of urban and rural areas. Results from these first pilot programs were promising and indicated reductions in aging-related stress, as well as increased confidence in managing the process of aging.

One of the FAH pilot sites is DOROT, a leading nonprofit serving older adults in New York City. Executive Director Mark Meridy is enthusiastic about the important role of CBOs in rolling out high-impact programming around loneliness. as well as the Creativity Circle® Platform.

“Community-based organizations like DOROT. which are committed to intergenerational engagement, are uniquely positioned to make a meaningful difference in the lives of seniors and our volunteers. We’re proud to partner with the Foundation for Art & Healing in bringing their public health expertise and technology-driven scaling capability to the challenge of tackling loneliness,” said Meridy.

Responding to the Global Pandemic—Expanding Reach and Engagement

In March 2020, many CBOs responded quickly to COVID-19, eager to address the social connection and support needs of older adults, many of whom were physically distancing during the pandemic. FAH worked closely with AARP Foundation and its CBO partners to adapt its offerings, recognizing that many of the original face-to-face activities and underlying program models could still be effective, even if delivered “at a distance.” FAH developed a variety of tele-supported virtual offerings, as well as a free “open to all” website that featured arts-based activities to reduce anxiety and stress.

The following are some of the new approaches, designed to provide meaningful social connections even when physical distancing is required. All are being continually evaluated and improved based on user feedback:

  • Reflect & Connect Calls, a telephone program, uses principles of creative arts expression, mindfulness, and social-emotional learning to deliver support to older adults over telephone calls and/or in small teleconferencing groups. Facilitator scripts, participant worksheets, materials lists, and evaluation questions have been designed and packaged to ensure ease of implementation.
  • A Virtual Creativity Circle® program is being adapted for delivery over Zoom or other video conferencing environments by CBO facilitators for older adults who are computer literate and physically distancing.
  • Stuck at Home (together), is a web destination that encourages visitors to engage in creative art challenges and mindfulness activities, as well as arts appreciation to reduce anxiety and stress and to inspire feelings of connection.

The Path Forward

The FAH in 2021 will scale its portfolio of Aging UnLonely efforts, including the Creativity Circle® Platform and the Reflect and Connect telephone-based outreach program, expanding its collaboration with additional CBO partners. Partners already include care delivery organizations such as health systems and large medical groups, and FAH will expand these types of partnerships in 2021, influenced by the recently released National Academy Of Sciences publication, Social Isolation and Loneliness in Older Adults (2020). The report emphasizes the need for health systems to pay increased attention to older adult loneliness and highlights the opportunity for CBOs to play a critical role in partnering with these systems to deliver programs to local populations.

In addition to increasing the number and types of partnering organizations, the FAH will continue to refine its underlying digital platform technology, recognizing it as a fundamental enabler for addressing loneliness at an expanded scale. In partnership with the AARP Foundation and other stakeholders and collaborators, our goal is to alleviate the challenges of loneliness and isolation for older adults by providing streamlined and cost-effective access to a growing set of evidence-based intervention programs. Working together, we believe we can make a meaningful and sustained difference in the lives of older Americans.

For more information about FAH’s Aging UnLonely activities, including any of the individual programs mentioned here, please contact lhudson@artandhealing.org.

Jeremy Nobel, MD, MPH, founded the Foundation for Art and Healing and is on the Harvard Medical School faculty in the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine. He can be contacted at jnobel@artandhealing.org. Amy Poueymirou is the director of programs at the FAH. She can be contacted atamy@artandhealing.org.

References

Anderson, O. and Thayer, C. 2018. “Loneliness and Social Connections: A National Survey of Adults 45 and Older.” AARP Research. Retrieved July 21, 2020.

CIGNA. 2020. “Loneliness Is at Epidemic Levels in America.” Retrieved July 21, 2020.

Committee on the Health and Medical Dimensions of Social Isolation and Loneliness in Older Adults.2020. Social Isolation and Loneliness in Older Adults: Opportunities for the Healthcare System. Washington, DC: National Academies Press.

Flowers, et al. 2017. “Medicare Spends More on Socially Isolated Older Adults.” Insight on the Issues. Washington, DC: AARP Public Policy Institute. Retrieved July 21, 2020.  

Klinenberg, E. 2002. Heat Wave: A Social Autopsy of Disaster in Chicago. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Pettigrew, S. and Roberts, M. 2007. “Addressing Loneliness in Later Life Aging and Mental Health.” Retrieved July 21, 2020.

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COVID-19: Now is the Time for Primary Care to Address Loneliness https://www.artandhealing.org/covid-19-now-is-the-time-for-primary-care-to-address-loneliness/ Thu, 17 Sep 2020 22:40:06 +0000 https://www.artandhealing.org/?p=237622&preview=true&preview_id=237622 The post COVID-19: Now is the Time for Primary Care to Address Loneliness appeared first on The Foundation for Art & Healing.

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The COVID-19 Pandemic: Now is the Time for Primary Care to Address Loneliness

By Jeremy Nobel, MD, MPH as published in in the blog for:

With more than 6 million diagnosed cases and nearly 200,000 deaths in the United States, the novel coronavirus is our nation’s most pressing public health crisis. And further, physical distancing measures have resulted in significant loneliness and social isolation—a parallel epidemic on the rise even before the COVID-19 pandemic. Nearly 50% of Americans report struggling with loneliness since the initial COVID surge in the US—and this loneliness can have devastating impacts on mental and physical health.

With its causal factors on the rise, the increasing numbers of people who feel lonely are also less likely to be motivated to adhere to COVID-19 public health measures, like wearing a mask and physical distancing, thereby increasing the risk for viral transmission. As a result, loneliness has turned even more deadly, and an urgent response is required. Primary care is uniquely positioned to be a leader in this response.

Primary care providers are integral to the American medical system and have long been the frontline for acute and chronic illness management, offering diagnosis, treatment, follow-up, and prevention. According to Dr. Russell Phillips, Director of the Harvard Medical School Center for Primary Care, and Dr. Andrew Ellner, Founding Co-Director of the Harvard Center for Primary Care:

Geographic areas with a higher concentration of primary care providers demonstrate better health outcomes, better healthcare quality, lower total medical expenditures, and more equitable health outcomes.

Primary care is fundamental to achieving lifetime health goals for individuals and communities, particularly when defining health as not merely the absence of disease or infirmity but achievement of complete physical, mental, and social well-being. And to achieve social well-being, there is perhaps no bigger challenge to overcome than loneliness and social isolation—especially now, in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic.

What is loneliness?

What IS loneliness, and how does it relate to social isolation? Social isolation can be objectively measured and is defined by absence of social contact. It’s experienced by many, often by those in rural settings or living alone in urban ones and with limited interactions with others.

Loneliness, on the other hand, is purely subjective. It is the self-perceived gap between the social connections one wants to have and what one is actually experiencing. Social isolation can be linked to loneliness, but one can also be “lonely in a crowd.” Loneliness is an emotional burden felt especially keenly by certain groups, including many older adults, caregivers, certain veterans, those marginalized because of gender, race, disability or immigration status, those dealing with adverse childhood events and other traumas, and those living with chronic illness.

Why should we care about loneliness? Loneliness has long been recognized as a risk factor for mental illness, including depression, addiction, and suicidality. In many cases, loneliness may initially arise or increase in intensity from a mental health disorder, driving a pernicious cycle of increasing illness severity.

And further, loneliness has significant implications for physical health. Recent research shows that loneliness can increase mortality risk by as much as 30%—on par with smoking 15 cigarettes per day. Loneliness has also been linked to cardiovascular disease, gastrointestinal illness, musculoskeletal disorders, and dementia. While the mechanisms by which loneliness causes physical disease are unclear, the increased morbidity and mortality risk is likely linked to evidence that loneliness is pro-inflammatory and immune suppressive.

Why has loneliness been so hard to get our arms around? Stigma and silence play key roles, making it hard to track and quantify. And personal inadequacy often accompanies loneliness… many perceive loneliness as their own fault, attributable to falling short in some way, to not being worthy of friendship, attention, or authentic connection to others. Essentially, it’s something to be ashamed of. As a result, many don’t talk about their loneliness or even allow themselves to self-identify as lonely, no matter how great their distress.

But now, things may be different. Amidst the COVID pandemic, the loneliness that so many of us are experiencing directly stems from the common enemy of a potentially deadly virus. When we’re lonely as the result of a pandemic, there is nothing to feel ashamed about. In fact, we’re united in our struggle. This shared bond is a powerful invitation to talk about loneliness, engage together in physically distanced social activities to achieve some shared connection, and ultimately, enhance our social health.

The role of primary care in addressing loneliness

With the increased visibility that now surrounds loneliness, there exists an opportunity to explore new ways to identify and respond to patients’ loneliness, partnering with them to address their social well-being.

And this is where primary care can play such a timely role. We could approach loneliness the way we approach depression in primary care, with a screening tool (Patient Health Questionnaire or PHQ-9) that has become routine. Similarly, we could screen patients with a short set of questions for loneliness, then confirm loneliness with a longer screening survey or open conversation, or both. Fortunately, a fully vetted three-question screening questionnaire already exists—the UCLA Loneliness Scale.

When loneliness is confirmed, primary care providers can direct patients towards effective resources to assist them. This approach is already used extensively in the United Kingdom and referred to as “social prescribing.” A primary care team member evaluates the patient’s social circumstances, then recommends a range of activities to increase social connectedness. Activities include group programs around special interests like nature walks, crafts, creative arts, sports, volunteering in programs that serve the community (e.g. school tutoring), workshops to develop interpersonal skills, or simply opportunities to talk regularly with others. While many of these programs are already available through community centers, libraries, and faith-based organizations, patients are more likely to engage in social programs when recommended by their primary care team.

Is addressing loneliness something that primary care can take on? Already stretched thin and with high levels of burnout, primary care teams may not be equipped to do more unless payment models are adjusted to reflect the value that addressing loneliness creates. If research can demonstrate those socially connected and less lonely patients are indeed healthier—including fewer and less severe illness episodes, fewer ED visits, and fewer and shorter hospitalizations—then the money saved can be reinvested in programs and personnel. But theory alone won’t change payment models. Rigorous outcome studies are required to drive innovation, scaling, and sustainability of loneliness remediation activities.

So, back to COVID-19 as a driver for addressing loneliness. The pandemic has shone a bright light on the US healthcare system, illuminating the need for meaningful change. Because of the virus and its forced isolation, there is both an urgency and window of opportunity to design, evaluate, and optimize programs that deliver enhanced social cohesion and connectedness. Addressing loneliness within primary care fulfills our obligation to promote the achievement of health in its fullest human dimension and to make a measurable and sustained difference in the lives of our patients. How can we not give it our best shot?

Acknowledgments: The author thanks Frank Spiro (from the Foundation for Art & Healing’s UnLonely Project) for his contributions to this blog post. This post is also available on the Center for Primary Care, Harvard Medical School website.

Jeremy Nobel

Jeremy Nobel, MD, MPH, is a primary care physician and public health practitioner whose work focuses on exploring and promoting innovative ways to improve health and well-being for individuals and communities. He holds faculty positions at the Harvard Medical School Center for Primary Care and Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. He also directs The UnLonely Project, an initiative of the Foundation for Art & Healing, a 501c3 non-profit founded in 2004.

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Forbes: Loneliness Linked To Negative Social Media Experiences https://www.artandhealing.org/loneliness-linked-to-negative-social-media-experiences/ Mon, 28 Jan 2019 23:07:24 +0000 https://artandhealing.org/?p=12757 The post Forbes: Loneliness Linked To Negative Social Media Experiences appeared first on The Foundation for Art & Healing.

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Loneliness Linked To Negative Social Media Experiences, Study Finds

Alice G. Walton, Contributor, Forbes

We’ve been hearing more and more about loneliness, and the “loneliness epidemic,” in recent years, as research has stared to lay out both its causes and effects. There are likely many reasons for this increasing psychological/societal issue, but one that’s almost certainly involved is our dependence on screens, and in particular social media. And a new study from the University of Pittsburgh and West Virginia University finds that social media use—or at least negative experiences on social—is linked to more feelings of social isolation, a.k.a. loneliness. (And below is a worthwhile infographic on loneliness.)

The team had previously reported that in college students, negative social media experiences were linked to depression: for every 10% rise in negative social media interactions a person experienced, their risk of depression rose significantly—by 20%. [more]

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Loneliness Article in Princeton Alumni Weekly https://www.artandhealing.org/bye-bye-loneliness-paw/ Sat, 15 Dec 2018 17:56:26 +0000 https://artandhealing.org/?p=12678 The post Loneliness Article in Princeton Alumni Weekly appeared first on The Foundation for Art & Healing.

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Bye, Bye, Loneliness

“Loneliness won’t just make you miserable,” Jeremy Nobel, MD, MPH says. “It will kill you.”

Excerpts from an article written By Deborah Yaffe in the Princeton Alumni Weekly

Photo: Graham MacIndoe

JEREMY NOBEL (Class of ’77)— PHYSICIAN, POET, public-health crusader — is scrolling through his phone, hunting for the snapshot he took a few days earlier: New York’s Washington Square Park at night, its famous arch bathed in floodlights whose reflected glow illuminates the intersecting paths below.

The photo’s meaning came to him only later, he says. “When I took this, I didn’t see the crossroads,” Nobel tells me, as we gaze at his screen together. “Because I wasn’t saying, ‘Oh, I’m at a crossroads in my life.’ It wasn’t that. It was, like, ‘Wow, there’s a kind of pretty Arc de Triomphe in the light.’ But the crossroads were there.” 

Did he perceive them subliminally? “Who the hell knows?” Nobel says cheerfully.

The moment encapsulates Nobel’s vision of how artistic expression can help heal the aching loneliness of modern life: first, by directing focused attention to a moment of experience; next, by encouraging further reflection on the meaning of that experience; and finally, by forging new human connections as you share that meaning with another person.

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COLORED CONSTRUCTION PAPER, markers, and decorative stickers spilled over the conference table. Inside a Manhattan office, Nobel and a consultant facilitator were giving representatives from two Long Island community centers a hands-on demonstration of what the UnLonely Project calls a “creativity circle” — a support-group meeting centered on an arts-related activity. 

Early next year, the community centers plan to run six-week programs of creativity circles targeting caregivers for the elderly and the sick. But on this crisp morning in early fall, social workers and managers bent over their own papers, creating squares for a group quilt. In one quadrant of their squares, participants represented their strengths; in the other three, they portrayed their support systems, the activities they rely on to decompress, and their hopes for the future. Some stuck to words. Others accessorized with stickers. One person drew trees and flowers.

It was interesting, one participant remarked, how the construction-paper square formed a unified picture of the resources available, creating a whole whose outlines might not have emerged in conversation. Nobel nodded. “Sometimes you can see the relationships between things differently if they’re laid out as made objects,” he said… more

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Option B There for the Holidays https://www.artandhealing.org/option-b-there-for-the-holidays/ Tue, 20 Nov 2018 18:53:57 +0000 https://artandhealing.org/?p=12613 The post Option B There for the Holidays appeared first on The Foundation for Art & Healing.

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The UnLonely Project founder Jeremy Nobel, MD, MPH was featured in this article for OptionB.org, the site built in conjunction with Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg’s book Option B.  OptionB.Org is dedicated to helping you build resilience in the face of adversity—and giving you the tools to help your family, friends, and community build resilience too. 

Here’s an excerpt from the article.  You can read the full story here


Comfort a friend facing a lonely holiday

It might surprise you that during this season of holiday parties and family gatherings, some of us feel more alone than ever. Loneliness creeps up year-round, but it can be an especially tough experience during the holidays.

What is loneliness?

Public health practitioner and physician Jeremy Nobel says that loneliness is the difference between the social connections a person wants and the ones they feel they have. It doesn’t matter if a person has plenty of friends; their view of the quality of their relationships can lead them to feel that something is missing. It’s also possible for someone to feel lonely even when they’re surrounded by others. One might feel lonely in a marriage, at work, or in a classroom.1 Loneliness is not the same as being alone—choosing solitude at times can help introverts recharge… (more)

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