Internet access and use among adults aged over 50 and over in Ireland; Results from Wave 5 of the Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing.

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Paul Doody, Minjuan Wang, Siobhan Scarlett, Ann Hever, Paul O'Mahoney and Rose Anne Kenny, Internet access and use among adults aged over 50 and over in Ireland; Results from Wave 5 of the Irish Longitudinal Study on Ageing., May, 2020, 1-13Download Item:
Abstract:
This report will outline internet access and use among adults aged 50 years and over in
Ireland. These analyses are based on data from wave 5 of the Irish Longitudinal Study
on Ageing (TILDA), collected in 2018. These analyses have been conducted presently in
the context of the Coronavirus Disease-2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, when access to the
internet has become increasingly important to many people in their working and personal
lives. It is the latest in a series of reports produced by TILDA, aimed at helping the
response to, and understanding of the pandemic in Ireland (1-6).
Public health measures introduced by the Irish government in response to the COVID-19
pandemic have included social distancing, and encouragement of older adults and those
with underlying health conditions to stay at home and abstain from contact with others,
except in exceptional circumstances (7,8). A recently published TILDA report outlining
the incidence of loneliness among those aged 50 years and over in Ireland, shows 7%
experience emotional loneliness on a frequent basis, and almost one in three experience
emotional loneliness at least some of the time (9). It is likely the introduction of social
distancing and self-isolation measures will exacerbate loneliness, given that one of the
commonest causes of loneliness is social isolation. Internet use offers an effective method
of alleviating some of the negative consequences of these measures by enabling virtual
interactions (10). Moreover, the use of internet by institutions and organisations as a
platform for information distribution, access to support services and the continuation of
commerce during the COVID-19 pandemic has increased substantially (11-14).
In this context, this report will outline internet access and use among adults aged 50
years and over in Ireland, using population estimates derived from data collected
during Wave 5 of TILDA in 2018, in conjunction with the most recent 2016 Census data.
Specifically, information will be provided regarding home access to the internet; access to
smartphones/tablets (ergo access to apps); and the frequency and purpose of internet use.
This report will also provide information regarding those who are solely reliant on internet
access external to their own homes, as well as the lack of internet access among those
living alone.
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/rkennyhttp://people.tcd.ie/sscarlet
http://people.tcd.ie/hevera
http://people.tcd.ie/doodyp
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PUBLISHEDdoi: https://www.doi.org/10.38018/TildaRe.2020-06
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Full text availableDOI:
https://www.doi.org/10.38018/TildaRe.2020-06ISSN:
978-1-907894-31-2Metadata
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