麻豆国产

College of Public Health convenes panel on a growing public health crisis鈥攕ocial isolation

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When George Mason 麻豆国产 student Jawad H. first heard talk of reducing hours at the 24/7 campus dining hall, he saw more than a logistical issue鈥攈e saw a threat to a rare space where students could connect and stave off isolation. 鈥淚 ran into a friend there at 11 p.m.,鈥 he said during a recent College of Public Health panel. 鈥淏y the time we finished talking, it was 3 a.m.鈥

As a member of the Student Government at the time, Jawad helped mobilize his peers to activate to preserve the dining hall鈥檚 hours鈥攁nd defend its role as a social lifeline.

The theme and importance of intentional connection ran throughout 鈥淪tronger Together: The Impact of Social Ties on Public Health,鈥 an April 9 panel at George Mason's Fairfax Campus hosted by the College of Public Health. This year, the annual National Public Health Week 鈥淐onversations and Connections鈥 event explored a growing recognition that loneliness isn鈥檛 just a personal issue but a public health threat.

Moderator Dean Melissa Perry and the panelists. Photo by Mary Cunningham/CPH

鈥淧erhaps nothing has changed more profoundly in recent years than how we interact as human beings,鈥 said , dean of the College of Public Health, who moderated the panel. 鈥淲e may check our phones hundreds of times a day, but go days without a real conversation. That disconnect has real health consequences.鈥澨

Two recent events helped elevate the issue: the collective isolation the world experienced during the COVID-19 pandemic, and a 2023 advisory from then-U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy declaring loneliness 鈥渁 national epidemic.鈥 Murthy鈥檚 report links social isolation to a 29% increased risk of heart disease, a 32% increased risk of stroke, and a 50% increased risk of dementia for older adults. Loneliness, he warned, is as deadly as smoking 15 cigarettes a day.

鈥淚鈥檓 glad that there鈥檚 a spotlight, because 鈥 loneliness has been sort of relegated to the purview of, this is an individual鈥檚 problem, as opposed to a systemic, structural problem,鈥 said , George Mason鈥檚 chief mental health officer. 鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing more acceptance that there鈥檚 a collective responsibility for addressing this.鈥澨

Moderator Dean Melissa Perry and the panelists. Photo by Mary Cunningham/CPH

Panelists focused on two groups especially vulnerable to isolation: older adults and young people.听

George Mason alumna Mary Louise Pomeroy, PhD Health Service Research '22, a postdoctoral researcher at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, noted that 1 in 3 older adults report frequent loneliness, and around 25% are socially isolated. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 unique about older adults,鈥 she said, 鈥渋s the combination of high health needs with declining social support.鈥澨

For many in this population, technology鈥攍ike smartphones, video chats, or even 鈥渟ocial robots鈥 in nursing homes鈥攃an be critical for easing isolation.

For young people, though, technology can sometimes have the opposite effect. 鈥淭heir mood is just dropping,鈥 said Wernicke, describing the impact of 鈥減assively scrolling鈥 through social media. 鈥淏ut they鈥檙e not actually interacting鈥攊t鈥檚 the illusion of interaction.鈥

found that 60% of U.S. college students reported feeling 鈥渧ery lonely鈥 in the past year.听

Connections won鈥檛 emerge without deliberate intent, said LaToya Thomas, principal and founder of the urban planning consultancy Brick & Story, which focuses on community resilience. 鈥淲e might need to do a little work, and that work is actually investing in our own inner curiosity about other humans,鈥 she said. 鈥淎nd that curiosity might actually help pull someone out of a state of loneliness and isolation.鈥澨

Thomas pointed to tailgates before football games as one example of humans creating connections from inert spaces. 鈥淭here is generally nothing exciting about these parking lots,鈥 she said. But 鈥減eople come and they bring chairs, they bring paraphernalia for their teams, they bring barbecue pits, they bring music. They literally create a space where there is no space. It鈥檚 really the intentionality of what we as social animals decide to do in terms of making spaces鈥攁s complex or simple as they can be鈥攊nto something that is really dynamic.鈥

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Past 鈥淐onversations and Connections鈥 events have covered topics including (2024) and (2023).