Creating Connected Workplaces: Insights from People Leaders at Leading Companies

How people leaders are responding to workplace loneliness and why it matters for your organization. Most organizations invest heavily in collaboration tools, team-building events, and open office designs. Yet 1…

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Missing the Measure: Why Claims About Social Media and Loneliness Require Stronger Evidence

Recent years have seen a pivotal shift in how governments approach social isolation and loneliness, marked by the groundbreaking appointment of Ministers of Loneliness in the UK and Japan, and the World Health Organization’s establishment of its first commission on social connection.

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Beyond Traditional Boundaries: How Big Team Science Can Dramatically Improve SIL Research

Social isolation and loneliness (SIL) research is facing a credibility crisis, largely driven by low-quality studies, insufficient sample sizes, and an overreliance on small-scale interventions that lack replicability.

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Social Isolation and Loneliness: The Critical Need for High-Quality Research and Evidence-Based Interventions

Social isolation and loneliness (SIL) have emerged as significant public health concerns, with research demonstrating their profound impact on physical and mental health outcomes.

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The Present and Future of Social Isolation and Loneliness Measurement

As social isolation and loneliness emerge as critical public health concerns, we face a pressing challenge: our tools for measuring these phenomena haven't kept pace with our understanding of their complexity.

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Why Survey Numbers Might Not Always Mean What You Think They Mean

We often hear claims like “15% of French citizens are lonely,” but how confident can we be in such statistics? The tools we use to measure constructs like loneliness are complex, and it turns out that much of what we think we know may be built on shaky foundations. In reality, the numbers we rely on might not fully capture what we hope they do.

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Misnomers of Modern Malaise: Stop calling loneliness an epidemic

he words we use to describe social issues shape both public perception and the strategies we develop to address them. This is especially true in discussions about chronic loneliness—a serious and widespread condition, but not one accurately termed an “epidemic.”

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