BY GRETCHEN
LIVINGSTON JULY 3, 2019
Americans ages 60 and older are alone for more than
half of their daily measured time – which includes all waking hours except
those spent engaged in personal activities such as grooming. All told, this
amounts to about seven hours a day; and among those who live by themselves,
alone time rises to over 10 hours a day, according to a new Pew Research Center
analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data.
In comparison, people in their 40s and 50s spend
about 4 hours and 45 minutes alone, and those younger than 40 spend about three
and a half hours a day alone, on average. Moreover, 14% of older Americans
report spending all their daily measured time alone, compared
with 8% of people younger than 60.
While time spent alone is not necessarily associated
with adverse effects, it can be used as a measure of social isolation, which in turn is linked
with negative health outcomes among older
adults. Medical experts suspect that lifestyle
factors may explain some of this association – for instance,
someone who is socially isolated may have less cognitive stimulation and more
difficulty staying active or taking their medications. In some cases, social isolation may mean there is no one
on hand to help in case of a medical emergency.
People ages 60 and older currently account for 22% of the U.S. population – 73 million
in all. It’s estimated this share will rise to 26% by 2030, fueled by the aging
of the Baby Boom generation. The well-being of older adults has become a topic
of much interest both in the United States and in other developed nations, particularly as
it relates to social connection.
Not surprisingly, time alone is closely associated
with living arrangements, for both younger and older Americans. About
one-in-four adults ages 60 and older (23%) live alone today – 16.7 million in
all. These older adults say they spend, on average, about 10 and a half hours
alone each day – almost twice as much time as those who live with a spouse.
More than a third (37%) of older adults who live alone report spending all
their measured time alone. Among those who live with someone other than a
spouse, the average amount of alone time a day is seven and a half hours. (The
3% of older adults who are living in institutionalized settings are not
included in this analysis.)
There are significant variations by age, gender and
education in time spent alone daily, driven in part by differences in marriage
and living arrangements. For instance, people in their 60s report 6 hours and
32 minutes of alone time, compared with 7 hours and 28 minutes for people in
their 70s and 7 hours and 47 minutes for people ages 80 and older. These age
differences are due in part to the fact that that older people are far less likely
to live with a spouse or cohabiting partner – 64% of those in their 60s do,
compared with 59% of those in their 70s and 36% of those 80 and older.
Older women spend more time alone, on average, than
their male counterparts, and this gap widens markedly at the oldest ages. This
is largely due to the fact that women ages 60 and older are more likely than
their male counterparts to live alone (28% vs. 18%) given their longer life
expectancies and higher rates of widowhood – and this gap in living
arrangements also widens with age.
While there aren’t significant gender differences in
time spent alone for people in their 60s, for instance, women ages 80 and older
spend about eight and a half hours a day alone, compared with 6 hours and 40
minutes for comparable men. When it comes to the share spending all measured
time alone, there are no gender differences among all people ages 60 and older,
but again a gap emerges at older ages – for people ages 80 and older, 20% of
women report spending all measured time alone, compared with 13% of men.
This gender pattern in alone time reverses once
gender differences in living arrangements are accounted for, suggesting other
factors are also in play. While 43% of men 60 and older who live alone report
spending all of their time alone, this share is lower for women who live alone
(34%). And among those living with someone other than a spouse, 21% of men
report spending all measured time alone, compared with 12% of women. The fact
that older women are more likely than men to be involved in activities outside
the home such as going to church or volunteering may
partly explain this pattern.
Differences in time spent alone also emerge across
educational levels. People ages 60 and older who have a high school diploma or
less education spend, on average, 7 hours and 18 minutes a day alone – about 45
more minutes than their counterparts with a bachelor’s degree. These patterns
reflect in part the fact that less educated people are less likely to be married and living with
a spouse than their more educated counterparts. (This is true among younger
adults as well.) About half (51%) of adults ages 60 and older with a high
school diploma are living with a spouse, compared with 59% of those with some
college education or an associate degree and 67% of those with a bachelor’s
degree.
https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2019/07/03/on-average-older-adults-spend-over-half-their-waking-hours-alone/
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