THE MEDICALISATION ERROR
In 2023, the United States Surgeon General issued an advisory declaring loneliness a public health epidemic. The United Kingdom had, by that point, had a Minister for Loneliness for five years. Australia, Japan, and Denmark had commissioned national strategies. The evidence base for all of this was substantial: social isolation is associated with elevated mortality risk comparable to smoking fifteen cigarettes a day, according to research compiled by Julianne Holt-Lunstad and colleagues. The cardiovascular, immunological, and cognitive consequences of chronic loneliness are well-documented and severe.
The policy response to this evidence has been, almost universally, to frame loneliness as a health behaviour to be changed at the individual level.
Loneliness apps. Social prescribing — the practice of GPs referring patients to community activities. Befriending services. Mindfulness programmes designed to reduce the subjective experience of isolation. Awareness campaigns. The entire apparatus of response treats loneliness as a condition that individuals experience and individuals must address, with support from services designed to help them do so.
This framing is not wrong, exactly. It is inadequate — inadequate in a way that matters enormously for whether anything structural changes.
When we treat loneliness as a wellness problem, we are treating a consequence as if it were a cause. The consequence is real. The cause is elsewhere.
THE STRUCTURAL ACCOUNT
Loneliness rates have risen consistently in Western societies across the period of economic growth and technological development that was supposed to be making life better. The rise is not uniform: it is concentrated among the young, the elderly, the economically precarious, the recently mobile, and communities that have undergone industrial transition. These are not random distributions. They describe a population whose social infrastructure — the physical and institutional structures within which dense social networks form — has been systematically withdrawn.
The third place, sociologist Ray Oldenburg’s term for the spaces of informal public life that sit between home and work — the pub, the café, the community centre, the library, the park — has been in structural decline across most Western cities for thirty years. Commercial rents in urban centres have displaced the low-margin, high-dwell-time establishments that third places require. Austerity has closed libraries, leisure centres, and community facilities. Suburbanisation has produced built environments optimised for car travel and domestic privacy, not casual encounter. Remote work has restructured the daily rhythms within which incidental social contact occurs.
These are not individual failures. They are policy outcomes, planning decisions, and market configurations. The person who is lonely because their town centre has been hollowed out by retail decline, their local pub has been converted to housing, and their library has closed is not suffering from a wellness deficit. They are experiencing the social consequences of economic and planning choices made over decades.
THE POLICY IMPLICATION
The argument is not that social prescribing is useless. For individuals experiencing acute isolation, connection to community activity is valuable. The argument is that social prescribing without structural change is a maintenance programme for a deteriorating condition. It addresses the experience of loneliness without addressing the conditions that produce it.
What structural change looks like is not complicated in principle, though it is contested in practice. It requires treating social infrastructure — the physical spaces and civic institutions within which social life forms — as a public good that requires investment on the same basis as transport infrastructure or healthcare capacity. It requires planning regulations that mandate mixed-use environments and social facilities in new developments. It requires commercial leasing frameworks that protect community uses. It requires reversing the logic of austerity as it has been applied to the civic estate.
None of this is provided by an app. None of it is addressed by a ministerial appointment without budget. The UK Minister for Loneliness has no departmental spending power. The advisory from the US Surgeon General has no enforcement mechanism. The awareness is real. The structural response, where it exists, is largely symbolic.
The distinction between a wellness problem and a structural problem matters because they have different solutions. A wellness problem requires better personal resources. A structural problem requires better collective choices. Treating loneliness as the former when it is primarily the latter is not merely ineffective. It is a form of blame — one that places the burden of a social failure on the individuals who are bearing its costs.
Loneliness is not a wellness problem. It is what a society looks like when it has disinvested from the physical and institutional conditions under which people reliably encounter each other. The evidence on its health consequences is serious. The seriousness of the evidence deserves a response at the appropriate scale.





