How have older adults adjusted to living during the COVID-19 pandemic? There’s no one-size-fits-all experience, researchers report.
In spring and summer 2020, the researchers launched a study to examine how the COVID-19 pandemic has fundamentally changed neighborhood environments and the way older adults age in place.
They found that some older adults reported less social interaction and diminished relationships with their neighbors, while others reported more. Some older adults experienced less social support from their neighbors, while others felt they experienced more support from their neighbors.
Some people’s neighborhoods became totally quiet during the pandemic, while other neighborhoods bloomed with outside happy hours, children playing in front yards, and residents walking and biking in the neighborhood—so much so that some study participants complained about the noise.
“There’s not one model of experience for older adults in this pandemic,” says Jessica Finlay, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Michigan Institute for Social Research and lead author of the study in The Gerontologist.
“There’s a whole diversity of reactions and experiences and perceptions going on across the country that I think reflects some of the broader disparities, polarization, and inequities that exist across the entire fabric of the United States.”
Neighborhoods with porches, yards, and front steps
To examine how older adults are living under the pandemic, Finlay and colleagues recruited 6,886 participants to complete an online survey in April and May 2020. The participants, who were from across the country, including Alaska, Hawaii, and Puerto Rico, then completed monthly follow-up surveys.
These surveys assessed the participants’ physical and mental health, level of socialization, and health behaviors such as exercise and drinking, as well as COVID-19 testing and symptoms. The survey also included open-ended questions to gather responses about participants’ ongoing experiences, perspectives, and significant life events.
From this group of respondents, the researchers drew a random sample of 1,000 open-ended responses. They used quotas for age, gender, race, ethnicity, and education aiming to match the US population of those over 55. Most of the participants lived in neighborhoods; about 20% of the respondents said they did not.
More than 25% of the study participants reported reduced quality and quantity of interactions with their neighbors—especially impromptu run-ins on front steps, porches, or yards—and a stop to gatherings such as indoor happy hours, book clubs, and athletic activities.
They felt that COVID exacerbated isolation, particularly among those without access to outdoor gathering spaces. Ideological and cultural differences prompted feelings of isolation, and those who lived in neighborhoods with high rates of COVID-19 cases or public health misinformation more often shared feeling isolated. But 12% of participants reported more neighborly interactions and socializations.
“I now know the names of my neighbors and we talk across the street from each other. On my morning walk, I normally see 15-25 other walkers and we keep our distance, wave, and say hi,” one participant said.
Some participants reported less psychosocial support.
“One of my neighbors is in ‘comfort care’ hospice and I feel extremely bad that I can’t go sit with her, bring them meals, etc., due to COVID concerns,” another participant said.
Loss of ‘third places’ to gather
Other participants who moved during the pandemic reported feeling isolated because they weren’t able to get to know their new neighbors. Some participants reported witnessing how COVID and varying adherence to public health measures—for example, mask-wearing and social distancing—seemed to underscore the country’s political divisions.
Some of the study participants worried that local restaurants and shops where they previously gathered for a cup of coffee and social interaction—locations Finlay calls “third places” outside of home and work—were going out of business. And still other people’s experiences were affected by neighborhood conditions.
“We know neighborhoods are starkly different,” Finlay says. “Not everyone has access to places to engage with each other and enjoy each other’s company. Having parks or big front porches are often skewed more toward affluent areas, which are predominantly where older white adults live. In comparison, communities of color often have less access to these private spaces to safely engage during COVID.”
The researchers noticed those who experienced decreased engagement, socialization, and support levels were more commonly participants of color.
“We also know that COVID numbers are not equal among our communities, too. So our hardest hit communities are often lower income and underserved,” Finlay says. “It just speaks to needing deep policy changes and structural investment in certain communities.”
This kind of attention to neighborhood infrastructure is critical to help older adults age well in place, the researchers say. Specifically, the COVID-19 pandemic may have underscored how important neighborhoods are to the health and well-being of older adults—accessible neighborhoods critically influence the ability of older adults to feel safe and supported, and to be physically and socially active, Finlay says.
“It is important to identify and address the pandemic’s long-term implications for aging in place, such as how older adults can safely inhabit public neighborhood spaces, adjust to being in crowded areas without feeling anxious, and return to the ‘new normal’ of daily life,” she says.
Source: University of Michigan