The Loneliness Problem: Why Companionship Is a Health Intervention
We tend to think of elderly care in physical terms, transport, mobility, medication, meals. But for many older people living alone in Johannesburg, the most damaging health problem isn’t a medical one. It’s loneliness.
The science is clear
Chronic loneliness in older adults:
- Increases the risk of dementia by roughly 40%
- Raises the risk of stroke and heart disease
- Is associated with higher rates of depression and anxiety
- Shortens life expectancy as much as smoking 15 cigarettes a day
It’s not a “soft” issue. It’s a measurable health risk.
Why it’s especially acute in South Africa
Many South African seniors have watched their adult children emigrate. Friends pass away. Driving stops, so social outings stop. Estate complexes and gated security, designed for safety, accidentally isolate residents further. The country can feel quieter as you age.
What helps
- Regular, predictable contact, a weekly visit your parent can count on
- Doing things together, a walk, sorting old photographs.
- Getting out of the house, even a short outing changes mood for days
- Pets, where manageable
What doesn’t help
- One-off “big” outings with long gaps in between
- Phone calls only (helpful, but not a substitute for presence)
- Television as background company
Our most popular service is simply a weekly companion visit, same person, same day, same warm cup of tea. Learn more.
How Serene Assist helps
Our companion care service exists precisely because loneliness is a medical issue. A regular companion, the same person, every visit, provides what family from a distance cannot: a warm, in-person presence on a predictable schedule. Most families tell us they see the difference within weeks.

