Technology and older adults in British loneliness policy and political discourse

IntroductionThis article provides an analysis of recent loneliness policy and political discourses from the United Kingdom pertaining to older adults. Although government asserts that several groups in society are “at risk” of loneliness, older adults remain the most frequent targets of policy inter...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Elian Eve Jentoft
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-08-01
Series:Frontiers in Digital Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fdgth.2023.1168413/full
_version_ 1797741702982664192
author Elian Eve Jentoft
author_facet Elian Eve Jentoft
author_sort Elian Eve Jentoft
collection DOAJ
description IntroductionThis article provides an analysis of recent loneliness policy and political discourses from the United Kingdom pertaining to older adults. Although government asserts that several groups in society are “at risk” of loneliness, older adults remain the most frequent targets of policy interventions. Technology is positioned as playing a role in the causation and alleviation of loneliness. Little research has examined loneliness in political discourses.MethodsWith a focus on how loneliness intersects with themes of technology and aging, this article presents an analysis of discourses guided by Bacchi's What is the Problem Represented to Be (WPR) framework. It endeavors to answer the following questions: What is the problem of loneliness among older adults represented to be, and what is the role of technology in this context – problem or solution?ResultsIn the discourses, assertions are made that issues of loneliness, societal change and digital exclusion are intertwined. Lonely older adults are problematized as hard to find and thus connect with interventions, warranting surveillance measures like loneliness heatmaps. Technological interventions to assist older adults in maintaining independence and connections to social networks are often proposed as solutions. The findings indicate dominant discourses position older adults primarily as subjects in need of care and as non-users of technology. Technology is positioned as a cost-effective tool to fill gaps in an overburdened and under-funded social care system that compounds issues of loneliness.DiscussionThe author argues the neoliberal and stigmatizing undertones within the corpus may undermine efforts to combat loneliness. Further, austerity is silent in the dominant problematizations of loneliness, foreclosing upon alternatives that problematize loneliness as resulting from neoliberal policies that continue to dismantle public infrastructure and social care.
first_indexed 2024-03-12T14:30:31Z
format Article
id doaj.art-a3276139ed8d49749b2aefe65ec5b6c1
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2673-253X
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-12T14:30:31Z
publishDate 2023-08-01
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
record_format Article
series Frontiers in Digital Health
spelling doaj.art-a3276139ed8d49749b2aefe65ec5b6c12023-08-17T14:21:40ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Digital Health2673-253X2023-08-01510.3389/fdgth.2023.11684131168413Technology and older adults in British loneliness policy and political discourseElian Eve JentoftIntroductionThis article provides an analysis of recent loneliness policy and political discourses from the United Kingdom pertaining to older adults. Although government asserts that several groups in society are “at risk” of loneliness, older adults remain the most frequent targets of policy interventions. Technology is positioned as playing a role in the causation and alleviation of loneliness. Little research has examined loneliness in political discourses.MethodsWith a focus on how loneliness intersects with themes of technology and aging, this article presents an analysis of discourses guided by Bacchi's What is the Problem Represented to Be (WPR) framework. It endeavors to answer the following questions: What is the problem of loneliness among older adults represented to be, and what is the role of technology in this context – problem or solution?ResultsIn the discourses, assertions are made that issues of loneliness, societal change and digital exclusion are intertwined. Lonely older adults are problematized as hard to find and thus connect with interventions, warranting surveillance measures like loneliness heatmaps. Technological interventions to assist older adults in maintaining independence and connections to social networks are often proposed as solutions. The findings indicate dominant discourses position older adults primarily as subjects in need of care and as non-users of technology. Technology is positioned as a cost-effective tool to fill gaps in an overburdened and under-funded social care system that compounds issues of loneliness.DiscussionThe author argues the neoliberal and stigmatizing undertones within the corpus may undermine efforts to combat loneliness. Further, austerity is silent in the dominant problematizations of loneliness, foreclosing upon alternatives that problematize loneliness as resulting from neoliberal policies that continue to dismantle public infrastructure and social care.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fdgth.2023.1168413/fulllonelinesspolicy analysisolder adultstechnologyWPRUnited Kingdom
spellingShingle Elian Eve Jentoft
Technology and older adults in British loneliness policy and political discourse
Frontiers in Digital Health
loneliness
policy analysis
older adults
technology
WPR
United Kingdom
title Technology and older adults in British loneliness policy and political discourse
title_full Technology and older adults in British loneliness policy and political discourse
title_fullStr Technology and older adults in British loneliness policy and political discourse
title_full_unstemmed Technology and older adults in British loneliness policy and political discourse
title_short Technology and older adults in British loneliness policy and political discourse
title_sort technology and older adults in british loneliness policy and political discourse
topic loneliness
policy analysis
older adults
technology
WPR
United Kingdom
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fdgth.2023.1168413/full
work_keys_str_mv AT elianevejentoft technologyandolderadultsinbritishlonelinesspolicyandpoliticaldiscourse