Nearly one in five people over 65 in the European Union lives alone. What sounds like independence is often its opposite: chronic loneliness that damages health. The WHO established a Commission on Social Connection in 2024 — a sign of how serious this problem has become.
Research is clear: social isolation increases the risk of death by 32 percent. Isolated seniors face a 42 percent higher risk of cardiovascular disease. Chronic loneliness significantly increases the risk of depression and suicidal thoughts.
Around 20.8 percent of older Europeans suffer from chronic loneliness — 21.7% among women and 16.3% among men. One in four seniors is socially isolated.
In Germany, over 6 million people aged 65+ live alone. Rural areas are particularly affected. In care homes, the situation is paradoxical: despite being surrounded by people, many residents report deep loneliness.
In Poland, labour migration has created a unique dimension of senior loneliness. Hundreds of thousands of young Poles work in Germany, the UK, or the Netherlands — leaving their ageing parents behind. Over 2.5 million Poles aged 65+ live alone. In Ukraine, the war has driven elderly loneliness to extreme levels.
In Austria, around 16 percent of over-65s frequently feel lonely. Switzerland shows similar patterns despite high prosperity levels.
The Commission on Social Connection (2024–2026) is working to establish social connection as a global health priority. The message: loneliness is not personal failure but a structural health risk requiring policy responses.
Technology can help, but nothing replaces personal contact. OPK.CARE connects qualified caregivers from Eastern Europe with seniors and facilities across Germany, Austria, and Switzerland — providing not just medical care, but human warmth and companionship.
Senior loneliness is a health crisis. With a 32% increased risk of death, social isolation is as dangerous as smoking or obesity.
Sources: WHO, BMC Geriatrics (2025), European Centre
March 19, 2026