Technology

Posted on May 27, 2014 by staff

Internet Training Would Cut Pensioner Loneliness

Technology

Training more older people to use the internet would cut loneliness among the over-65s, a report by a think tank has suggested.

Policy Exchange has called for every person in the UK to be taught basic digital skills, including how to send emails and use social networking sites, and said the training would help pensioners stay connected with friends and family.

Training 6.2 million people without basic digital skills would cost £875million by 2020, or £141 per person, it said.

Policy Exchange says around 40 per cent of people aged 65 or over in the UK do not have access to the internet at home, while more than five million people have never used the internet.

The report predicts an increasingly elderly population will face a “major challenge” in the future and risk being isolated as families move further apart for work.

The news comes after an Age UK poll of 2,000 over-65s earlier this year found 10 per cent of pensioners described themselves as often or always lonely – a rise from 7 per cent last year.

With the number of people aged 85 or above set to double over the next 20 years, it says such training will yield “huge” economic and social benefits for the UK.

Eddie Copeland, author of the report, said learning basic computer skills would stop pensioners becoming vulnerable to loneliness.

“In an increasingly isolated and fast-moving world it is vital that everyone in society is able to use the internet and understand its benefits,” he said.

“From alleviating social isolation, bringing together communities, paying bills and now accessing public services online can improve lives.

“Being able to simply write an email or access a social networking site could provide older people with a way to stay connected to their friends and families, who may live hundreds of miles away.”

But Andrew Kaye, from the charity Independent Age which offers advice and support to older people and their families, said: “Encouraging and enabling people to go online could be one really useful means of tackling loneliness – but it’s not the only way.

“We mustn’t forget that it’s really important older people still have a choice about how they access public services so they are not only available online.

“To those without technology skills a trip to the local post office or real human contact is just as important.”